donut.build is a community-driven Minecraft schematic library built mainly for players looking for DonutSMP-style gameplay builds. It gives players one place to browse categorized builds, preview them before downloading, and get schematic files without having to search across several unrelated sites and communities.
The purpose of the site is straightforward: make useful Minecraft builds easier to find and easier to use. Instead of relying on scattered links, players can search a central library and quickly find builds that fit what they want to create.
The site is designed to be useful for both beginners and experienced players. Newer players can use it to learn how schematics work and how to install them, while experienced players can use it to save time, compare options, and keep their building workflow organized.
donut.build also includes written guides for tools such as WorldEdit and Litematica. That means the site is not only a download library, but also a practical reference for players who want help using the files they find here.
This project was created to solve a common problem in the Minecraft building community. Schematic files are often scattered across Discord servers, hidden in video descriptions, or uploaded to temporary file hosts that do not stay available for long.
Over time, many of those downloads become harder to access. Links break, posts go out of date, invite-only communities change, and older resources stop being useful. Players often end up checking multiple sources just to find one working file.
donut.build was created to centralize reliable schematic downloads in one place. The goal is to improve accessibility and reliability so players can avoid that friction, save time, and spend more of their effort building instead of searching.
donut.build is developed and maintained by an independent developer and Minecraft player. The project began as a personal tool for organizing useful schematics, references, and notes, then gradually expanded into a public resource that other players could use.
As the library grew, it became more than a private collection. The site developed into a structured archive for builds, guides, and community submissions, with the aim of being useful to players who wanted a more reliable place to find schematic files.
The site is actively maintained and improved over time. New features, fixes, and content updates are added as issues are found and as better ways of organizing the library become clear through regular use.
Feedback from users helps shape those improvements. Reports, suggestions, and repeated questions are used to decide what should be fixed, clarified, or expanded next.
Most schematics on donut.build are uploaded by community members. Community submissions are an important part of the site because the goal is to build a shared library that reflects what players are actually using and looking for.
Users can report broken downloads and incorrect listings when something is missing, mislabeled, outdated, or not what it claims to be. Those reports help keep the library accurate and reduce the chance that bad files remain visible for long.
Moderation tools help maintain quality and keep the library safe and reliable. In addition to some user-uploaded schematics, the written guides and educational content on the site are created by the site owner to help users install schematics correctly and understand the tools involved.
For a more detailed explanation of how reports, removals, and copyright complaints are handled, see the Moderation & Copyright page.
donut.build is not affiliated with the DonutSMP. Minecraft and related assets are trademarks of Mojang Studios, and this site is not endorsed by Mojang.