Compatibility
Minecraft: Java Edition
Platforms
Supported environments
Creators
Details
Configory
Convention-based configuration for Minecraft mods.
Configory is a small Java configuration library that makes mod config feel simple at the call site without giving up type safety where your code needs it. Define a value once — with its type, default, and constraints — and use it safely everywhere.
public static final ConfigKey<Float> SPEED_MULTIPLIER =
config.defineFloat("core.speed_multiplier", 1.0f)
.range(0.1f, 10.0f)
.describe("Global speed multiplier.")
.register();
float speed = getConfig(SPEED_MULTIPLIER);
setConfig(SPEED_MULTIPLIER, 3.0f).save();
Need dynamic access for debug tooling or scripts? Reach for the same config by string path:
float speed = getConfig("core.speed_multiplier").asFloat();
setConfig("core.speed_multiplier", 3.0f).save();
Features
- Typed config keys — read and write values with compile-time type safety.
- Dot-notation paths — nest values inside a config's JSON file, or keep a simple mod to a single flat file.
- Fluent validation — declare ranges and constraints once; invalid writes are rejected.
- Generated command surface — expose your config through your mod's own in-game command, with zero Brigadier boilerplate.
- JSON-backed files — human-readable config, with explicit saving so you control when it's written.
- Per-mod isolation — each mod maps to its own config file, cleanly separated.
- Lightweight bootstrap conventions — minimal setup to get going.
Notes
Configory is a loader-agnostic library mod (it depends only on Gson and targets Java 21). Compile against it as a normal dependency, but don't bundle it — ship it as a required dependency and let players install the Configory jar separately, so several mods can share one copy. A single jar loads on Fabric, Forge and NeoForge and it works across a very wide range of Minecraft versions.
Links
- Documentation: https://indemnity83.github.io/configory/
- Source & issues: https://github.com/Indemnity83/configory
Icon: book_scroll_written by Malcolm Riley, CC BY 4.0, upscaled.


