You need to transfer the world files off of the flash drive to ~/.minecraft/saves. ~, especially in Linux, is used to represent your home folder, where your Desktop, Documents, etc. are stored. This folder is usually /home/. Since .minecraft begins with ., it is a hidden folder, and will not appear in a file manager. To get around this, you have to either use a terminal (see here), or instruct your file manager to show hidden files (see here How to show hidden files in Nautilus 3.20.3 Ubuntu 16.10?. It looks a little different in newer versions, but you did not specify what version of Ubuntu you were using.).

This tutorial explains how to run Minecraft on a portable location (e.g. on a thumb drive). Portable installation is, an installation that is not "integrated" with the computer, which is useful for managing multiple installations and generally keeping things organised. This is useful if you want to retain your game data (launcher profiles, worlds, resource packs, etc.) when switching computers.


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If you are not planning to play Minecraft on a thumb drive but on your main hard drive instead, it's highly recommended for you to make the game portable with this guide because this will give you some big advantages over standard installation. If you store different Minecraft versions (1.8, 1.12, modded 1.12, modded 1.7.10, latest, etc.) in one folder/launcher instance, mods/worlds/settings from other versions may conflict with version you are currently playing. If you want to separate them on standard installation, you will have to also keep each folder of each version in .minecraft directory and rename them every time you want to change version you are currently playing. On portable installation only a folder and launcher script file is needed to be created and after following this guide you can just play selected version just by double-clicking on its script file.

Note: After this guide the game will be only 99% portable: the game data will be stored and used by game and its launcher where you want but launcher will create .minecraft directory anyway and will be placing there (just only) its log files (like update logs, logs with game messages and crashes, etc.) If you really care about it, you can combine this guide with the guide for the old launcher: the game will create .minecraft directory if it doesn't exist anyway but will just leave it empty[unverified].

Navigate to the portable drive in the file explorer, and create the D:\Games\PortableMinecraft\ directory. Next, create Launcher folder for launcher with its data and MyMinecraft folder (or another name of your choosing) for game data.

If you have existing game data, you can move it to the desired directory. Navigate to the .minecraft folder and copy all of its contents (but not the folder itself) into D:\Games\PortableMinecraft\MyMinecraft.

Note: The following tutorial assumes that the USB disk is located (and mounted) at /media/user/USBDisk, and that you would like to have portable Minecraft at /media/user/USBDisk/minecraft-portable. However, this guide can be used to install the game to any directory. When following this guide, replace this directory with the directory you actually want to install the game to.

I have access to chromebooks at my school, however they don't have a lot of storage so there is not enough storage to download MEE. I was wondering if there was a way do download MEE onto a flashdrive and play it that way instead of downloading it directly to the chromebook?

You might be able to open and play worlds from a flash drive, but I don't recommend it for long term -- and I would not play the game off a flash drive as a long-term solution either. Sorry! It will work best to have everything on the internal drives.

I believe Minecraft was created so that it can only work when i's in applications folder because they don't want people to be able to play it on other peoples hard drives, they want them to pay money to buy it for themselves. This is just another trick they use to make themselves more money.

Minecraft is a great game that has taken the world by storm, and the only video game in history that has made its creator a billionaire. It has sold more than 122 million copies, making it the best-selling PC game to date. Let's see how to create a portable Minecraft installation on a USB thumb drive, to play on any PC without installation.

If we are going to play portable Minecraft straight from a USB, it's best to have a fast thumb drive. A USB 2.0 model will probably work, but we will have a much better experience if our motherboard and flash drive both support USB 3.0.

So, for a comfortable experience, we would recommend a USB stick of at least 8GB. For the guide, we used the 32GB Sandisk Extreme USB 3.0, which is one of the fastest USB flash drives around and comes at a great price.

Most 8GB and 16GB USB drives come with a default FAT32 filesystem. Likewise, most 32GB+ thumb drives come with the exFAT filesystem. Neither is suitable to install the portable Minecraft, so we need to format the flash drive to NTFS.

The first of this commands points to the Minecraft executable on the thumb drive. The second --workdir command orders the executable to use the .minecraft folder we created inside the "data" folder on the USB flash file.

you forgot to inform people that the name of the launcher has to match the name in the .bat file. instead of blindly copying and paster must check that they both say "minecraft.exe" or "minecraftlauncher.exe"

make sure the name of your .exe matching the name in the .bat file for example if one says "minecraft.exe" and the other says "minecraftlauncher.exe" it will get confused. so change the name of one or the other so they match

Is it necessary to have java installed for the latest version of minecraft? If so is there a way to make that portable? So that way you'd be able to run Minecraft from a USB using a java installation on that same USB rather than having to rely on the system drive to have an installation of java.

you can use this to make it run silently in the background without the popup window. not recommended cause if any of the files or locations change you'll need to update the shortcut. let me know your thoughts on it

C:WindowsSystem32wscript.exe F:MinecraftPortableminecraftportable.vbs F:MinecraftPortableminecraftportable.bat

Nearly 50,000 Minecraft users have been infected with a nasty piece of malware that aims at reformatting hard drives, wiping out backup data from the targeted system along with deleting other important files.

Hello everyone!


Sorry if this has already been asked. I've browsed the Help page and searched in the forum, but wasn't able to find any related thread to this topic.

I am planning on recording a lot in the next few days - as far as I've seen, the current place where replays are saved is the computer drive where Minecraft is installed. My problem is, that this is an SDD, which has only about 60GB of free space.


So now I'm wondering, is there any way to change the path for where replays are saved? And additionally, how much space does a 1 hour recording approx. take up? Maybe it's not as much as I expected, and I'll be able to use the SSD just fine.


Anyway, thanks a lot and have a great day everyone!

You can change the location of all the replay_* folders in the ReplayMod config file. Its name differs depending on the version you're using (and before 2.2.0 it is also be split across multiple files) but you should be able to find it in ".minecraft/config".


The thing which takes up the most space in replays is the world. If you change dimension often, it'll be significantly larger than if you just stand at the same position for an hour.

Also beware that significantly more disk space is required during recording than for permanent storage of a replay as the recorded data is stored in its raw form temporarily on the disk during recording and only after recording is it stored in compressed form.


60GB is probably plenty either way. I recorded my (almost) complete coop playthrough of the Age of Engineering modpack (~9 days / 229h) which ended up using a total of 5.3GB with the largest single recording (10h) being 448MB compressed (4.8GB raw) (though again, the recording size really depends on what you're doing and you can get to that size far quicker by constantly hoping between dimensions).

Encased chain drives may be placed side by side either vertically or horizontally to form a chain passing rotational power among all the blocks. The blocks must touch on their sides (not axis to side) and be in a single straight line to form a chain. The axes of the encased chain drives may be all parallel or blocks can be rotated to orient the axis perpendicularly. Encased chain drives can also pass rotational power through their rotating axis, but this is not a continuation of the same chain.

The image to the right illustrates several options and constraints for connecting encased chain drives. Panel A shows a typical arrangement with a single string of drives with their sides touching. This forms a straight brown line in the graphics representing the axis of the encased chain. Panel B shows that even though two added blocks are touching sides with a string of drives, they are not forming a single line and so do not receive power. Panel C shows bocks having been attached with axes touching sides. Axes cannot pass or receive power from the side of an encased chain block. Panel D shows that new alignments can be created using rotated encased chain blocks to couple separate chains.

When a disk is inserted into a disk drive that is adjacent to a computer, a directory is visible in the computer's root directory titled 'disk'. If another disk is inserted into a different drive that is also connected to a computer then that next directory is entitled 'disk2' and so-on for each additional disk that is inserted and connected.

The Gameband + Minecraft is a unique wearable band that instantly backs up the Minecraft worlds you build, allowing you to take them anywhere. Essentially a USB 3.0 thumb drive in bracelet form, the Gameband also shows off the time, date, and animations you can create with an included app. It's a bit pricey for a peripheral, and Minecraft players who prefer the console versions are left out in the cold, since the Gameband only works with Windows, Mac, and Linux systems. But the kid-proof, durable design and easy-to-use interface ought to appeal to enthusiasts of one of the most popular video games of all time. ff782bc1db

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