pokopoko

"pokopoko"
Song by

Kumi Tanioka

Track released

April 26, 2024

Length

05:04

Genre

Ambient

Songwriter(s)

Kumi Tanioka

"pokopoko" is a song composed by Kumi Tanioka that plays in the Overworld.

Locations

Location Odds of playing
Dripstone Caves 13.33%
Grove 8.33%
Jagged Peaks 7.69%
Snowy Slopes 14.29%

Track description

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Previews of tracks in Minecraft have been shortened to 30 seconds on this wiki in accordance with fair use rationale. "11" and "Magnetic Circuit" are exempt from this.

Data values

ID

Java Edition:

Soundtrack Title File name Sound events
"pokopoko" pokopoko.ogg music.menu,
music.overworld.dripstone_caves,
music.overworld.grove,
music.overworld.jagged_peaks,
music.overworld.snowy_slopes

Bedrock Edition:

Soundtrack Title File name Sound events
"pokopoko" pokopoko.ogg music.menu,
music.overworld.dripstone_caves,
music.overworld.grove,
music.overworld.jagged_peaks,
music.overworld.snowy_slopes

Raw music files

In Java Edition, the music files can be found in .minecraft/assets/objects.[a]

In Bedrock Edition and Minecraft Education, it can be found in:

  • Mobile: com.mojang/resource_packs/music/vanilla_music/sounds/music/game/
  • Windows: %PROGRAMFILES%\WindowsApps\Microsoft.MinecraftUWP_<version>_x64_8wekyb3d8bbwe\data\resource_packs\vanilla_music\sounds\music\game

All music files are in Ogg Vorbis.

History

Java Edition
1.21May 3, 2024Added "pokopoko".
"pokopoko" has been added to the list of songs that can be played on the main menu.
1.21.6May 13, 2025"pokopoko" no longer plays on the main menu.
Bedrock Edition
1.21.0Preview 1.21.0.24Added "pokopoko".
"pokopoko" has been added to the list of songs that can be played on the main menu.
1.21.90Preview 1.21.90.25"pokopoko" no longer plays on the main menu.

Issues

Issues relating to "Pokopoko" are maintained on the bug tracker. Issues should be reported and viewed there.

Trivia

  • The word "pokopoko" (ポコポコ) is an onomatopoeia in Japanese, which simulates the sound of bubbles popping or a hollow object being knocked. It can also be used to describe the appearance of a pitted surface.
    • According to Kumi Tanioka, she "wanted to express a bird's-eye view of the world of Minecraft while delving a little more freely into it".[1]

References

  1. "Composing the Trial Chambers" by Sophie Austin – Minecraft.net, April 27, 2024.
  1. The files in the objects folder are hashed. To locate the music files, see Tutorials/Sound directory.

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