Installing MultiMC and Practicing Good Mod Organization It’s a veritable Minecraft Swiss Army Knife, and we can’t say enough good things about.Īlthough we’ll be using the Windows version of MultiMC, it’s also available in the same portable open-source goodness for OS X and Linux. Not only does MultiMC do all that, but it also cuts down on bloat by using shared libraries and minimizing how many copies of Minecraft and auxiliary files need to exist in order for your individual instances to run. MultiMC is a huge improvement over the vanilla Minecraft launcher and it makes setting up profiles and managing your play experience very simple.įor those players who are heavily into modding, MultiMC is practically a necessity as it decreases the fuss factor of messing around with mods by many fold and makes creating discrete profiles and mod checklists for individual play instances as simple as clicking a few times with your mouse. MultiMC is a free and open-source launcher for Minecraft (it will completely replace the regular Mojang supplied launcher) that does an absolutely spectacular job of managing your Minecraft experience.
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Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, it’s time to show you how to streamline the entire experience in a way that keeps all your worlds, mods, and profiles separate, well organized, and with no risk that you’ll load a world with the wrong mods and completely wreck your hard work. In earlier articles we taught you how mods worked and how to manually install them. There has to be a better way and there is a better way: MultiMC. Not to mention a few tears and screams if your multiple players happen to be young siblings prone to accidentally (or not so accidentally) messing with each other’s worlds. If you want to further compound the issue, throw in multiple players on the same machine and you’ve got a big mess on your hands.