How to Brew a Potion of Slowness (1:30)
The Potion of Slowness (1:30) gives you the Slowness effect for 1 minute and 30 seconds. When drunk, it reduces your movement speed by 15%. Most players use this potion to throw at mobs as a splash potion rather than drink it themselves.
What You’ll Need
To brew a Potion of Slowness (1:30), gather these materials:
- 1 Potion of Swiftness (3:00) [the Speed effect potion]
- 1 Fermented Spider Eye
- Blaze Powder (to power the brewing stand)
- 1 Brewing Stand
Step-by-Step Brewing Instructions
1. Open Your Brewing Stand
Place down a brewing stand and right-click to open it. You’ll see three bottom slots for potions and one top slot for ingredients.
2. Add Blaze Powder
Put blaze powder in the left fuel slot. This powers the brewing stand and lets you start the brewing process.
3. Add Your Base Potion
Place your Potion of Swiftness (3:00) in one of the three bottom slots. This is what you’re converting into a slowness potion.
4. Add the Fermented Spider Eye
Put the fermented spider eye in the top ingredient slot. The brewing process starts automatically.
5. Wait for the Brewing to Finish
You’ll hear a “glug glug glug” sound when brewing finishes. The fermented spider eye disappears and you get your Potion of Slowness (1:30). Hover over it to confirm the potion name.
Creative Mode Location
Java Edition 1.8 to 1.19: Brewing tab in the creative menu
Java Edition 1.19.3 to 1.20: Food & Drinks tab
Game Commands
Use these commands to get the potion instantly:
Minecraft 1.13+:
/give @p potion{Potion:"minecraft:slowness"} 1
Minecraft 1.9 to 1.12:
/give @p potion 1 0 {Potion:"minecraft:slowness"}
Minecraft 1.8:
/give @p potion 1 8234
What to Do With It
Drinking this potion slows you down. Not useful for survival mode unless you’re testing potions or making puzzles. The real use is converting it to a Splash Potion of Slowness by adding gunpowder. Throw the splash version at mobs to slow them down in combat.
You can also create longer or stronger variants by brewing extended or level 4 versions, though the 1:30 standard version is most common.