Hi guys i downloaded the "other" option from minecraft's website and got a tar.gz file. I extracted it using tar xf command and got a file with a app image type app from it. I can run minecraft but i want to make it so that i can launch it using the applications menu and not through files. Is there any way i can do that?

I'm kinda new on this, and need some help.I had MC on my windows with mods, when changing to Ubuntu I got the same version. I tried to install the mods I had on my windows but I cannot make it work, because there's no .minecraft file nor %appdata%. I followed instructions like copying modloader into the .jar file, which didn't work and other stuff Can you help me, please?


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Open your home folder. Press Ctrl+H. You should now see it as "dot-folders" are usually hidden. This assumes you have run minecraft as your user previously. If you haven't, run it, doing a few things in it(just to get it to create its config files).

When you've installed it using snap install, try looking inside ~/snap/minecraft-launcher-ot/67/.minecraft Another way to find it on any operating system is by starting the game (so you come at the menu with "Singleplayer" and "Multiplayer" on it), pressing options >> Resource Packs... >> Open Resource Pack Folder and then going one folder level higher.

it actually is not called %APPDATA% It is actually called mods if you installed forge to access it you go to resource packs and open the file to put them in but then you go back a file (you will see it in the corner of the window) it is called .minecraft look in there AFTER you installed forge it will be there!;)

Minecraft Education is available as a desktop installer and through the Microsoft Store. Both versions function the same and have the same features. The difference is in how Minecraft is downloaded and installed. The Windows desktop version is downloaded from the Minecraft Education website.

All I did was go to: and select "Show All Platforms". Next I clicked and downloaded the Minecraft.jar file. Thats it.Just be sure you have Java installed. You also may need to click the Minecraft.jar file properties and change the file to launch as an executable.

I stumbled upon the missing step in an older community post from last year, it turns out uninstalling Minecraft requires an extra step: deleting the minecraft Application Support folder that was created as part of the initial install.

You need to use the Profile system in the Minecraft Launcher. When you create a new profile you can select a Game Directory(a folder inside the .minecraft folder you create), also select "Use Version" when creating the profile and use the drop down and select Forge 1.7.10. You will then be able to put your mods in the folder inside .minecraft folder you created and pointed the Game Directory to.

Yes, when you install Forge it will be available in the Use Version drop down when you create a new profile. If you haven't run Minecraft 1.7.10 by itself first, you should make thats your version and run it by itself without forge, then change the version to Forge 1.7.10 and run it by itself with no mods installed. Make sure your Game Directory points to an empty folder in your .minecraft folder. Make sense?

Yes, when you install Forge it will be available in the Use Version drop down when you create a new profile. If you haven't run Minecraft 1.7.10 by itself first, you should make that your version and run it by itself without forge, then change the version to Forge 1.7.10 and run it by itself with no mods installed. Make sure your Game Directory points to an empty folder in your .minecraft folder. Make sense?

The profile system lets you have forge installed on some profiles and not others. For instance, I have Forge for one modpack and Forge+Liteloader in another doing what I instructed above, just naming my pack and folders different things within the .minecraft folder. All your profiles, if you enable the Game Directory and point it to the right folder should be structured like this:

When Minecraft is installed on your computer, there is a folder called com.mojang that is generated in the AppData folder. You will need to find this folder so you can add your content to it.

minecraftWorlds contains each world that has been generated within the current build of Minecraft. Each folder also contains resource and behavior pack folders for any packs that may be in use within the world.

For the past 3 weeks, my 10 year old daughter begged me to build her a a minecraft/bukkit server, and I am attempting to do so on my on VPS running Centos6.4. I am following -centos-bukkit-installation.56371/, except that I installed Oracle Java JDK-7u45 instead of JDK-7u2. I have a regular user called "minecraft" where I am trying to run the service under.

On step 6, it describes creating /etc/init.d/minecraft which I have done so (script duplicated below). I assume I need the owner of the file to be "minecraft" and not "root" if I want the service to be run as user "minecraft", correct?

EDIT. Do I need to replace craftbukkit.jar with the full name craftbukkit-1.6.4-R1.0.jar in either of the two lines of /etc/init.d/minecraft? Also, does the second line need to be modified in regards of the java configuration?

When downloading and installing the minecraft launcher from the offical website, there is no step for me to choose the install path and its always in C:\XboxGames. Anyway for me to change the path into C:\GameLaunchers?

Yes! When I downloaded and ran the legacy .msi launcher install from Mojang, it asked where I wanted to install the launcher. Set that to your target directory and you are good to go! You might experience issues because Windows is very picky about where you store your files. C:/ is your root directory, and Windows likes you to store and install your stuff in your user directory.

If this still causes problems and simply doesn't work or you want an easier-to-use experience, you might consider using a different launcher like MultiMC, CurseForge, or ATLauncher. They make it significantly easier to add mods and manage the location of your installations. I assume you're using Windows, so all these launchers are available for you to use. I have used all these launchers and I personally recommend CurseForge. It is very user-friendly and has access to arguably the largest modpack database in the Minecraft community.

If you use Linux, or if anyone comes across this post with a similar issue, you can go to the same link but install the Other Distributions tarball and run tar -xzf minecraft.tar.gz. This will create a /minecraft directory you can move where you like. All the launchers I mentioned work for Linux except CurseForge. They still haven't added Minecraft support for some reason.

Also, did a reinstall again and I get this when i try to install anything with snap:

error: too early for operation, device not yet seeded or device model not acknowledged

Just pressed up arrow and enter again and it installed. Then gave me the same error.

I heard that Flatpak programs are in very high size. Are Flatpak packages downloading every dependency with them? I also heard that too. My net connection is a little bit slow and I would not want to re-install every dependency when I install a program, it would eat my disk space and network.

Once you've found your Minecraft saves folder, you can copy and paste the location into your file archiver program and extract the Minecraft map from there. The location of your saves folder will be something like this: "C:\Users\yourusername\AppData\Roaming\.minecraft\saves" on Windows.

Most PE maps these days use the .mcworld format. This is a special file just for minecraft. Just click it and it will automatically install the bedrock map into your game no matter what system you're on.

Step 3: Now that Java is installed on your computer, you should be able to click on the file and run it. This will open up the Mod System Installer, which will walk you through the process of setting up Forge on your system.

Step 5: Take this file and move it into the Mods folder you took note of during the installation of Forge. This file path defaults to C: > Users > Username > AppData > Roaming > .minecraft.

Due to the nature of this Custom Main Menu mod, buttons added to the Main Menu by 3rd party mods like the Replay Mod will not show up by default.

Thus, to access the Replay Viewer/Editor/Center, you need to manually configure the position for those buttons.

To do so, you need to modify the Custom Main Menu configuration file.Usually, you can find it at .minecraft/config/CustomMainMenu/mainmenu.json (if you're using a mod pack launcher, it normally has its own .minecraft folder).

For an explanation of this config file, have a look at Custom Main Menu's page.

ReplayMod can record when Sodium is installed, but currently lacks the FREX Flawless Frames API to render. A modified build of Sodium, that supports this API, is available from the ReplayMod downloads, by clicking the Click to show compatible Sodium versions button. 17dc91bb1f

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