
Portable Minecraft For Mac
Thanks for 2000 downloads The original all in one portable Minecraft solution. Make a better Gameband Minecraft for a fraction of the price This program is a one click tool that downloads and runs a portable installation of Minecraft.
What’s more fun than the creative block-building in Minecraft? Building whenever and wherever you want with a portable Minecraft installation on a flash drive you can take with you. Read on as we detail how to configure a portable copy of Minecraft for build-anywhere fun. Why Do I Want to Do This? A standard Minecraft installation parks your Minecraft game data in a system directory and, until that not all players have taken advantage of yet, relies on a local installation of Java. RELATED: Today we’re looking at two methods for turning your Minecraft experience into a portable one that allows you to not only park Minecraft and all your Minecraft data on a removable drive but, even if you’re not bent on taking it on the road with a flash drive, to easily back up and restore your entire Minecraft experience in one swoop as all the files are contained in one directory. We run our installation of Minecraft as a portable installation for the latter reason; yes, it’s great that we can take it anywhere but the best part is we can back up everything by simply copying one directory.
To achieve this end of easily portability/back up we’ll walk you through two techniques. First we’ll look at how to take a vanilla copy of Minecraft and make it portable and then we’ll look at the more advanced MultiMC launcher that offers a more robust and flexible Minecraft management experience (and also lends itself very well to serving as a portable launcher). We’d encourage you to read through the entire tutorial before following along with us so you can decide whether you want the vanilla Minecraft experience of the flexibility of the MultiMC launcher. Note: the steps in this tutorial are Windows-centric but the general principles can easily be adapted to Mac and Linux machines; both Minecraft and MultiMC are cross platform. Selecting and Preparing Your Flash Drive You can follow this tutorial with any quality removable media (or even follow it just to make a portable Minecraft folder on your main hard drive), but we opted to turn one of the flash drives we had laying around into a dedicated Minecraft portable drive with a Minecraft themed icon, naturally.
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As far as drive selection goes, this is not the time to recycle that 512MB USB 1.1 drive you have sitting in the bottom of a desk drawer. Given how inexpensive they are, a good USB 3.0 flash drive with a decent amount of storage (8GB minimum) is in order. To give you a sense of perspective on how much space you need a vanilla Minecraft install with only a few small worlds will take up approximately 300-500MB but once you start building out/exploring large worlds, adding in mods, downloading elaborate maps, and so forth you can easily max out an 8GB drive.
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Our main Minecraft directory, packed with maps, mods, and useful Minecraft-related apps weighs in at around 14GB. If you’re looking for a drive with plenty of room for Minecraft plus whatever other files you want to carry along with you there are tons of highly rated USB 3.0 drive to choose from on Amazon like (available in 16/32/64GB sizes for $10/$16/$29, respectively). With your flash drive selected, if you want to follow along in our purely cosmetic footsteps and add custom icon to your portable Minecraft flash drive the process is very straight forward. First, you need to locate an appropriate icon to use. Although you could fuss around with creating your own.ico file and downloaded. Once downloaded we copied it to our flash drive and renamed it minecraft.ico. With the icon on the drive you just need a little bit of code to prompt Windows to use the.ico file as the drive icon.
Create a text document in the root of the flash drive and paste the following code into it. [AutoRun] icon=minecraft.ico Save the file as autorun.inf. The next time you insert the flash drive it will load the specified icon as the drive icon and, as seen in the screenshot above, you’ll have a cool little Minecraft icon in place of the generic drive icon. There is a small amount of additional prep work required but it is dependent on which version of the tutorial you follow (vanilla Minecraft or MultiMC) so we’ve separated the additional steps out into their respective subcategories. Configuring Vanilla Minecraft for Portability There are two hurdles to successfully running vanilla Minecraft as a portable application. First, we need to tell Minecraft to look for its game data in a local directory and not in a system wide application data directory as it does with a default installation.