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Friday Fun Thread for August 11, 2023

Be advised: this thread is not for serious in-depth discussion of weighty topics (we have a link for that), this thread is not for anything Culture War related. This thread is for Fun. You got jokes? Share 'em. You got silly questions? Ask 'em.

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Contemporary 2011 versions of Minecraft I'm unsure about.

There's a pretty sizable community of Golden Age Minecraft players, and while it varies when that age actually falls depending on who you talk to (Rotarycraft and Thaumcraft fans usually say r1.7!), most of the reddit community tends to emphasize b1.7.3 (June 2011) or r1.2.5 (April 2012) are two of the most common ones. AtLauncher does recent stuff and legacy versions pretty well, but there are also legacy-specific installers. Zontargs was pretty heavily into it, if he's still floating around.

Ah, 1.7.2. The moment I finally bought the game instead of just playing the browser demo with my siblings.

Please excuse me while I shoot up some of this nostalgia.

Well, I'm unsure not about it being playable, I know it is. It's whether it's playable offline on a legacy system. I forget when Minecraft strongly implemented an account requirement, and furthermore, what account has changed since 2011. First it was a Minecraft account, then a Mojang account, then a Microsoft account. Will a modern launcher that authenticates with the correct account work on 2010 hardware and Vista?

Ah, that's fair. The big problem is usually less than authentication side, and more fighting with finding the right Java version. Go too early and you don't have TLS 1.2+ support, go too late and it'll do a version check during Java install and be a pain in the ass (or worse, depend on SSE instructions you may no longer have). But people have done it!

Newer Minecraft versions (1.17+) require more recent versions of Java that have stricter version checks; there are some workarounds but they're incredibly inelegant. But I don't think that's what you're trying to do.