This tutorial shows how to install and play the popular Minecraft sandbox game in Ubuntu 24.04, Ubuntu 22.04, Linux Mint 21/22, and their based systems.
Minecraft has different editions, including Java, Bedrock, Legends, and Dungeons, as well as the discontinued Pi edition.
So far, only Minecraft Java edition runs natively in Linux. User can however install and play the Bedrock and Pi editions through sandbox environments, though they are unofficial and have limitations.
Minetest, the popular open-source game alternative to Minecraft, has reached the 0.4.11 release recently.
The 0.4.11 release adds new game-play options, provides various visual changes, boasts build system improvements, provides various performance optimizations, and offers a lots of bug-fixes. For a complete list of changes, see the minetest web page.
Install Minetest 0.4.11 in Ubuntu:
While Ubuntu repository provide an old version of the game package, the Minetest Stable PPA has made the new release available for Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (also contains the 12.04 build, but failed so far).
To add the PPA and install the game, press Ctrl+Alt+T to open terminal. When it opens, run the commands below one by one:
Installing Minecraft in Ubuntu is quite easy. All we need to do is install Java, download and run the .jar executable from its official website.
1.) To get better game experience, you may first install graphics driver for your video card:
For Intel graphics, you’re good to go with the default open-source driver.
For NVIDIA or AMD graphics, it’s better to use a proprietary video driver. Open Additional Drivers utility from the Unity Dash, select the NVIDIA or AMD driver from the list and install it.
2.) For Java, you can either install OpenJDK Java 7 from Ubuntu Software Center or install Oracle Java from PPA.
To install OpenJDK Java 7, click the button below to bring up Ubuntu Software Center and click the install button.
To install Oracle Java, see this post or just run commands below one by one in terminal:
To do so, right-click on the file in Nautilus browser and go to its Properties windows -> Permissions tab and finally check the box where it says “Allow executing file as program”.
5.) Finally start the Minecraft Launcher:
When the launcher opens, log-in with your account and click the Play button. After downloading required packages, you’re finally able to play the game:
This quick tutorial is going to show you how to install minecraft, the popular sandbox indie game, in Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr.
An unofficial PPA provides an installer script to automatically download the files from Mojang’s servers and install the game on your system. So all you to do is get the script from the PPA.
minecraft login
Before getting started, you may read the PPA description:
# Not Redistribution
Since the script actually goes out to Mojang’s servers to get the files, I’m not redistributing any of their files. This project is simply an installer for their stuff.
# Not a Black Screen Fix
If your computer has issues running Minecraft with OpenJDK 7, then it will have issues running this. Because that’s what this is. I’ve tested this on multiple machines and it’s worked fine, but your mileage may vary. That said, one of the main black screen issues I’ve seen is people not running it with OpenJDK 7. ;)
To get started, press Ctrl+Alt+T on keyboard to open the terminal. When it opens, run the commands below one by one:
This simple tutorial shows you how to easily install minecraft sandbox indie game in Ubuntu 13.10 or Linux Mint 16 via PPA.
The package in this unofficial PPA is only a script that automatically connects to Mojang’s servers and downloads the files.
Pay attention on the PPA description before getting started:
If your computer has issues running Minecraft with OpenJDK 7, then it will have issues running this. Because that’s what this is. I’ve tested this on multiple machines and it’s worked fine, but your mileage may vary. That said, one of the main black screen issues I’ve seen is people not running it with OpenJDK 7. ;)
To get started, press Ctrl+Alt+T on keyboard to open terminal. When it opens, run commands below one by one: