Tutorials/Galacticraft Installation Guide

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Welcome to the Galacticraft Installation Guide!

While installing Galacticraft is normally pretty simple, this guide is written to provide a step-by-step instruction on how to install the mod and troubleshooting for people who may be having any issues with the installation process and the 1st run of the mod.

We hope you enjoy the mod as much as we did making it!

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TIP: You can use the search tool (Ctrl+F or Cmd+F) of your browser for a quick search in this article. However, it is advised that you read this from beginning to end to be sure you are not missing something. If you are having any issues not covered by this article, please report them here.

Contents

Picking Your Minecraft Version

Something important to understand, for people completely new to mods for Minecraft, is you have to match up the versions of Minecraft, Forge, and the mod. All Mods - and Forge - are organised according to which Minecraft versions they match, and things will not work if you try to mix mod versions intended for different Minecraft versions.

Mods are made for specific Minecraft versions which the community has chosen. Popular choices are: Minecraft 1.6.4, Minecraft 1.7.2, Minecraft 1.7.10, Minecraft 1.8.9, Minecraft 1.10.2 and Minecraft 1.11.2. And some mods are not yet updated to the latest Minecraft versions, as each update gives a lot of work for mod authors.

There are not huge differences between these different Minecraft versions (OK, some have horses and rabbits, and some don't... !) And all the different Minecraft versions are free to download, for anyone who already bought the game on a PC or a Mac. You can have more than one Minecraft version on your computer: the Minecraft launcher lets you choose between several different Minecraft versions.

So actually you should choose your mods first, and then look to see which Minecraft version the mods require, and make sure you have that one set up!


Galacticraft versions available

The Galacticraft versions offered for Minecraft 1.11.2, Minecraft 1.10.2 and Minecraft 1.8.9 are the latest Galacticraft, also known as Galacticraft 4. Galacticraft 4 plays the same in all three of these Minecraft versions, so you will have the exact same Galacticraft features whichever one of these you pick. We made it this way so you can have a choice when matching Galacticraft with recent versions of other mods you like. Galacticraft 4 requires Java 8.

The Galacticraft versions offered for Minecraft 1.7.10 and Minecraft 1.7.2 are Galacticraft 3. That was the current Galacticraft version from 2015 to 2017. In its latest builds, Galacticraft 3 is extremely stable, and compatible with pretty near all other mods. Most of the pages on this Wiki are written with Galacticraft 3 in mind!

The Galacticraft version which is offered for Minecraft 1.6.4 is Galacticraft 2. That's older, but still seen in modpacks like Attack of the B Team, and it still plays perfectly fine but it doesn't have the newer features of the mod.

For historians / nostalgia, there's even Galacticraft 1 for Minecraft 1.5.2! That was also seen in modpacks like Tekkit Lite and Voltz.

Requirements

These are the minimum version requirements for Galacticraft 3 and Galacticraft 4 - any later version of Forge (within the same Minecraft version) should also work. On servers, for Sponge version requirements see here.

Galacticraft Version Minecraft Version Forge Version Java
Galacticraft 4 1.11.2 13.20.0.2228 Java 8
Galacticraft 4 1.10.2 12.18.2.2171 Java 8
Galacticraft 4 1.8.9 11.15.1.1764 Java 8
Galacticraft 3 1.7.10 10.13.4.1448 Java 7 or Java 8
Galacticraft 3 1.7.2 10.12.2.1147 Java 7 or Java 8


Installation Guide

First a question: Do you already have Forge installed and working?

Yes: So you are already able to play other mods in whichever version of Minecraft you picked? Great, in that case installing Galacticraft is very easy.

No: First follow the guide at #Installing_Forge, then come back up here!

Installation in three steps

Step 1

On our official Downloads page, find the Galacticraft version you want to play. This is now organised according to different Minecraft versions.

Whichever Minecraft version you pick, we recommend using the Latest build of Galacticraft, given to you at the top of the list. If for some reason that isn't what you want, then you can also try the Promoted version, or older versions are available if you look further down the list.

You must download three files for Galacticraft: (do not use the Developer builds, those are only for programmers!)

Before moving on, please check carefully that the downloads of all three files completed. If your internet connection is slow, or you are downloading other stuff at the same time, then a Galacticraft download might fail to complete after some minutes, so check that hasn't happened to you!

Step 2

Move the three Galacticraft files you just downloaded into your .minecraft/mods folder. (Don't have a /mods folder in .minecraft? See #Installing_Forge. Don't know how to find the .minecraft folder on a PC or on a Mac? See here)

When doing this, carefully make sure to remove any other versions of the GalacticraftCore, Galacticraft-Planets and MicdoodleCore files which were already in your /mods folder. The game will fail to launch if you have two different versions of the same mod in the /mods folder!

Step 3

Start Minecraft using the standard (vanilla) Minecraft launcher from Mojang, using the Forge profile, and hit Play.

It really should be that easy.


Extra Note for first timers:

If this is literally the first time you have started playing with mods then you will need to set the Minecraft launcher to launch the correct version of "Forge". Choose the Forge profile (bottom left). Make sure it's Forge for the correct Minecraft version which you want to play (bottom right):

All set to play Minecraft 1.7.2 with Forge.


If the launcher profile is not currently set to play with Forge for the Minecraft version you want, click Edit Profile, look in the center of the screen (Version Selection), there is a selection box called Use version: - change it to the Forge version you want. Normally the Forge versions are found near the end of the versions list. [Official guide from Mojang on this.]

Moving On

Once you have the mod installed (and now would be a good time to install any other mods you want) and your Minecraft loads up OK, you may start your adventure to space!

(One more thing: your computer needs to be connected to the internet, the first time you run Galacticraft. That's because it needs to be able to automatically download one more file, commons-codec-1.9.jar.)

Read on with the Galacticraft Getting Started Guide to get you started with all the basics.

If you are combining this with other mods, or building your own modpack, it would be a good idea to read our notes on Compatibility. We also have wiki pages on Game Balance and Configs and other setup details.

Combining Galacticraft with other mods

Does Galacticraft work with other mods?

Yes. Galacticraft can be played alongside any other mods for the same Minecraft version, and should integrate neatly with them. Galacticraft normally does not care which exact other versions of those mods you have, it should work with most things: any known special requirements are listed on the Compatibility page. So just assemble all the different mods you want to play into your .minecraft/mods folder, and start the game.

Note: we cannot promise that all the other mods you want are compatible with each other. Some other mods (CoFH!) require very specific versions of libraries or core mods in order to work, but may not agree about that or it may not be well documented. For this reason, some skill goes into assembling a stable modpack! If you encounter problems, the best approach is to temporarily remove some mods from your /mods folder and see if that fixes it. Caution: if swapping around mods like that, make sure first to back up your saved world or use a new test world! You will lose blocks and items if you remove mods and then start a game in an existing saved world.

Do you recommend any other mods?

NEI (Not Enough Items) or JEI (Just Enough Items) is almost essential, to show you all the Galacticraft recipes. (From Minecraft versions 1.10.2 onwards, NEI is a plugin for JEI, so you will need JEI.)

If you want an alternative to NEI, Galacticraft 3 also has some support for Craft Guide.

It helps to have an industrial or tech mod with Galacticraft, to help you process ores faster and gather all the resources you need to build rockets and get into space. Mekanism is the closest in spirit to Galacticraft. Tinker's Construct, Thermal Expansion, EnderIO are other good choices, they can be combined if you like. Galacticraft also has full compatibility with the long-established industrial mods IC2 and Buildcraft. You can even use their wrenches on our machines and our Standard Wrench on their machines!

Or you could take a different approach and use magic to help you gather resources, for example Thaumcraft.

We also like the mods which expand the beauty and diversity of the Overworld, mods like Natura and Biomes O'Plenty. Now you can add tool mods, storage mods, combat mods, really the choice is endless...


How much JVM memory do mods need?

If you have lots of mods, you might need to increase the memory you give to Minecraft (that's the 'JVM Arguments' in the Minecraft launcher 'Edit Profile' page). You can try leaving that on its default, but if you have several mods, that may not be enough. The most important memory setting is -Xmx.

The best memory setting for you to use depends a lot on whether you are running 32-bit or 64-bit Java. As a good rule of thumb, your -Xmx setting needs to be:

64-bit Java: 1G for vanilla Minecraft + another 1G for every 25 mods installed: so 2G or 3G should be OK for Galacticraft and a good number of other mods, very large modpacks could require 5G or 6G there.

32-bit Java: 768M for vanilla Minecraft + another 512M for every 25 mods installed (but on 32-bit Windows on older computers it actually can't be more than 1024M, that's the same as 1G). 1G should be OK if you are playing with Galacticraft, NEI or JEI, and just a couple of other mods.

If the memory requirements of all your mods are a problem, you can roughly cut the memory requirements in half using a mod named FoamFix. Galacticraft is tested with FoamFix and we are not aware of any issues.

JVM settings will also affect Minecraft performance (mainly lag spikes due to the Java 'garbage collector' running). You can find guides to these settings in many places on the internet, some good, some not so good! The best settings also depend quite a bit on your PC, how much RAM you have, which operating system, which Java version (Java 7 or Java 8), and whether you have 32-bit or 64-bit Java, so settings which somebody else is recommending are not necessarily the best for your setup!

I'm already playing [INSERT NAME] modpack, it would be great if it had Galacticraft too

Find the /mods folder for that modpack (it may not be in the normal .minecraft/mods location - if you used a different launcher like the Technic Launcher, look for the .technic folder). Add the three Galacticraft .jar files to that /mods folder, and now you can have Galacticraft in the modpack.

You may have to set the launcher to stop checking updates for the modpack. If you don't, a modpack update might undo your addition of Galacticraft to the pack - a lot depends on which launcher you are using.

Minecraft versions older than 1.7.10

Minecraft 1.7.2 support

Galacticraft 3 is for Minecraft 1.7.10, but actually it also works with Minecraft 1.7.2, we made it for both! Really old laptop PCs have Intel internal graphics which cannot support Minecraft 1.7.10, so those PCs can't use any Minecraft version later than 1.7.2. The Galacticraft 3 download files marked for "1.7.10" also work in Minecraft 1.7.2, isn't that smart?

Advanced tip

Some players like to have mods from multiple Minecraft versions available on their computer - maybe a set of mods for testing 1.8.9 and 1.10.2, as well as the current playing versions in 1.7.10.

Launching Minecraft will most likely crash if you mix mods for different Minecraft versions in the .minecraft/mods folder.

But there's an answer for that: in the /mods folder you can make subfolders:

  • 1.6.4 for your 1.6.4 mods
  • 1.7.10 for your 1.7.10 mods
  • 1.8.9 for your 1.8.9 mods
  • 1.10.2 for your 1.10.2 mods

Put the mods for different Minecraft versions in the correct subfolders, and you should be golden. They will not get mixed up, and Forge will automatically load the correct ones for the Minecraft version when you play.

If you have 1.7.2 and 1.7.10 subfolders, you might want to copy the Galacticraft 3 files into both of them! (Remember, Galacticraft 3 works equally well in 1.7.2 or 1.7.10.)

If you're tinkering about with different Minecraft versions like this, please be careful when loading your saved game worlds - if you made a world in 1.7.10 and you load that world when playing 1.8.9, then the world will be converted to 1.8.9 format and you will not be able to go back to using it in 1.7.10.

Minecraft 1.6.4 support

Lower on the Downloads page are some versions of Galacticraft 2, which was for Minecraft 1.6.4. That's older, but some great modpacks (for example Attack of the B Team) are still using it. It requires at least Forge version 1.6.4-9.10.0.837. We recommend that you use the Latest version of Galacticraft 2.

For Minecraft 1.5.2 or earlier:

These early versions of Galacticraft are no longer available to download from us, but some people may have them from elsewhere, they are also included in some venerable modpacks such as Tekkit Lite and Voltz. If you have a Technic modpack, use the Technic launcher to download and the launch the modpack. If you don't:

  1. Install Forge (Drag the Forge class files into your minecraft.jar).
  2. Drop the Galacticraft jar file into your coremods folder - not the mods folder!
  3. If you decided on Basic Components, click the "Load Basic Components" button when it appears after launching Minecraft.
  4. You're done!

Troubleshooting

This is all very complicated, isn't there an installer?

Actually, we hope it's not too complicated if you followed the steps! There is no official installer for Galacticraft. Some people do make unofficial installers. We strongly recommend you do not use them. First, they will likely install an out-of-date version of the mod, as the installer guys do not update as often as we update the mod. Secondly, who knows what other adware, spyware or viruses they might be installing on your computer as well. Thirdly, some unofficial installers may be breaching Galacticraft's licensing - Galacticraft is freely available, open source software so if anyone is trying to charge you money for it then something's wrong!


I don't know where to find the files I downloaded!

Often your web browser has a Downloads menu which will open up a list of recent downloads and you can check there whether the downloads are completed yet. (In Firefox it's under the Tools menu.)

If you found the downloads in your browser, you can right-click the individual downloads and choose 'Open Containing Folder' to see the folder where the download files are at. (This may work slightly differently in Chrome or other browsers.) If you still can't find them, maybe ask a friend or family member to help you?


I don't know where to find the .minecraft folder

This can be tricky to find!

Finding your .minecraft folder on a Windows PC

In the Windows Start menu, click Run, then enter %APPDATA% in the box. That will open up the Application Data folder. The Application Data folder has the .minecraft folder in it, normally it's the first folder shown. There are videos on YouTube which can help with this. Once you've found it, you might want to create a shortcut to this folder and place the shortcut on your desktop for next time.

Finding your .minecraft folder on a Mac

On a Mac, the folder is named minecraft (no dot at the start) and you can find it at ~/Library/Application Support/minecraft. That ~ symbol means the current user folder. You might be able to find the right folder by searching under Macintosh HD/Users using Finder - see next paragraph - but the easiest way to get to the minecraft folder quickly - and without a lot of searching around in Finder - is simply to open up Terminal, and type the following exactly: open ~/Library/Application\ Support/minecraft, then press the Return key. This should open up the minecraft folder in Finder immediately. Pro Tip: You can start Terminal by typing 'Terminal' into Spotlight (use Cmnd+Space to bring up Spotlight) and double-clicking Terminal in the search results. Congratulations, if you're using Terminal to do stuff you are a Mac power user!

A problem you will likely encounter if you do not use Terminal and instead just try searching for the minecraft folder in Finder, is that on most Macs the Library folder is a hidden folder by default. That makes it difficult to find the minecraft folder using Finder, but you can still get to the minecraft folder very easily using Terminal as explained above. If you want to use Finder to find it, you may first need to set your Mac to show hidden files and folders in Finder, which is quite complicated!



Minecraft won't launch at all

You need to figure out whether Minecraft is starting to launch (shows the white Mojang loading screen) and crashing - see next step - or whether it is not even getting that far. If it's not even getting that far:

  • Make sure you know how to launch regular (unmodded) Minecraft using the Minecraft launcher.
  • In the launcher, switch to the Forge profile, see screenshot above, and in the bottom right of the screen (orange circle in that screenshot) make sure it's showing a Forge version - the example in the screenshot is Forge version 10.12.2.1147 which is the correct one for playing modded Minecraft 1.7.2. Click the Edit Profile button if that's not showing up correctly, and change the Use version: setting to the one you need, and hit Save Profile.
  • Click Play. It should be that simple!




Minecraft crashes with:- org.lwjgl.LWJGLException: Pixel format not accelerated

This is a common Minecraft setup problem. Minecraft uses OpenGL to talk to your video card / display. LWJGL is a standard 'library' which manages that talking. If it pops up this error when you start the game, it's because it wasn't able to make an OpenGL connection with your video card. This can be for many different reasons, for example: you're on a laptop which is so old (5 years+ old) or so basic that it doesn't have a video card capable of OpenGL - your video card driver needs updating (can be a problem for Windows 10 people) - maybe some other strange setting like JVM memory settings is wrong (untick the JVM options box in Minecraft Launcher profile) - or something which can be fixed just by restarting your PC. There's a lot of stuff written on internet forums about this, most of it not very helpful.

Another possible cause is that another program on your PC took the OpenGL connection, which stops Minecraft from using it.

Skype has been seen to do this, in 2017 updates. Yes really, Skype! (Even though Microsoft owns both products.) So if you think your video card supports OpenGL and its drivers are up-to-date, just try quitting Skype and other programs you have open, and try again.

Minecraft crashes with:- AL lib: (EE) alc_cleanup: 1 device not closed

This is another common Minecraft start problem.

It's a confusing one, because sometimes you see this when there is some other startup problem (scroll up higher in the console or error log to ses if there was something else) and sometimes the audio system is the problem.

Advanced users who are having to start Minecraft over and over due to setup problems are the most likely to see this...

The cause of the audio system problem is like this. When the Minecraft game ends normally, for example using the Quit button in the main game screen, then you can notice it always finishes its console logging with the rather important message: "SoundSystem shutting down...". Even when the Minecraft game crashes, it normally shuts down its sound system properly before it exits to desktop (it's good that way!) But if you force-closed the Minecraft game, last time you played, then it misses that all-important step. By "force-close" we mean on Windows, right-click on the Minecraft tab in the Windows taskbar and select Close (or even worse, use the Task Manager to force the application to close). Force-closing Minecraft is bad, don't do it!

The good news is that usually this problem fixes itself if you just start Minecraft again after seeing the error.

If it recurs, check again that there isn't some other cause - look for error messages earlier in the console or log. You can also try shutting down any other Minecraft or other game running on your computer, also your music player, movie/TV player, Skype and other voicechat programs, and anything else which might take over your PC's sound system. Then start Minecraft again!



Minecraft crashes with:- java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException

If you are having this specific crash (these are the first four lines of your crash report):

   java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException
       at java.nio.Buffer.checkIndex(Unknown Source)
       at java.nio.DirectIntBufferU.get(Unknown Source)
       at net.minecraft.client.renderer.RenderGlobal.func_72712_a(RenderGlobal.java:350)

the reason for this crash is mostly likely your view distance is too large for Minecraft to handle. This can happen - for example - if you play later Minecraft versions like 1.11 then switch back to 1.7.10 to play older mods. The later Minecraft versions are OK with the longer view distances, but the earlier Minecraft versions can't always handle them.

If you got as far as the Minecraft main menu, you can change your Options there. If not, you can fix it by quitting the game and editing the options.txt file in your .minecraft main folder. Look for a line like this: renderDistance:32 (it could be another number, anything over 16 is potentially a problem). Change the number there to something like 12 or less, that's a render distance of 12 chunks (192 blocks) which should be enough for most people. If 12 works OK and your PC is powerful, you can try increasing it through in-game options after the game started OK. If 12 doesn't work, try something even smaller like 6, 7, or 8.



Minecraft keeps crashing while the game starts up

  • If you're seeing a "brown screen of death" with Forge requirements missing, make a careful note of what it says, shut down the game, and put the missing mods in your /mods folder. (Sometimes it's asking for a specific version number of a mod there, so make sure you have that version!)
  • If mod configurations are wrong, or there is a bug or incompatibility between mods, Minecraft can crash after starting Forge startup but before reaching the main menu. There are probably details of this crash in your logs (look in the .minecraft/logs folder for the latest log)
  • First thing to check is whether it's Minecraft + Forge themselves which are crashing, or a mod which is crashing. So, empty out your /mods folder totally - move the mods to another place for now, like My Documents or a desktop folder. Click Play. It should launch Minecraft with only Forge installed, no mods. The game main menu will say, bottom left, "3 mods loaded". (That's Forge, FML and MCP - the framework for modded Minecraft but no actual mods!) Create a New World - do not use your existing worlds, you will damage the world if you play it after taking away mods! Check the New World plays OK.
  • If there's even a crash with no mods then you need to fix your Minecraft + Forge. Maybe it doesn't have enough memory (try the default memory settings, in the launcher click Edit Profile and untick the JVM arguments box). Or maybe it's not installed correctly (a bad download?) Or if the crash says Exception in native code then most likely it doesn't like your video driver, try updating the video driver and also it's important to make sure the video settings on your PC have all the OpenGL settings fully enabled.
  • If you can launch OK with no mods, then start adding mods back into the /mods folder in small groups. Keep on over and over adding more mods and starting the game again to see if it still works. Keep notes of which ones you just added, so that if it stops working, you know which mods to be looking at. Maybe start with Galacticraft's three files (GalacticraftCore, Galacticraft-Planets, MicdoodleCore) and check that you can play OK with those installed.
  • While you're doing this, check again that all the mods are versions intended for this Minecraft version! People sometimes try to mix and match mods for different Minecraft versions, and that almost certainly won't work!
  • A few people have incomplete downloads of mods, especially larger file sizes (for example GalacticraftCore is a large mod file, around 11MB). Incomplete downloads can look like they're working but then cause various crashes soon after the game starts, usually ClassNotFoundException. Please check carefully that your Galacticraft file downloads completed - look in your browser's Downloads history, it will show which downloads completed and which failed! If you're not sure, definitely try downloading Galacticraft again!
  • Galacticraft actually checks for a few common installation problems when it starts - if you see a text box reporting a problem, do what it recommends and do not just hit the Ignore button!

It reaches the Minecraft main menu screen but then crashes when I start playing a saved world

  • Try updating to the latest version of Galacticraft.
  • If that doesn't fix it, read the first few lines of the crash report, starting from the top - often (not always) it names right there the mod which is causing the problem.
  • If it's a Galacticraft problem, you can ask for support on the forum. You will be asked to post a copy of your crash report (find it in folder .minecraft/crash-reports) and maybe other information as well.
  • Be patient, most problems are fixable and people on the forum will help you, but it can take a day or two to find the answer.

MultiMC problems

  • Are you using MultiMC as a launcher? Don't. MultiMC is not recommended for Galacticraft.
  • Some people have made it work OK but if you have even a small error in your MultiMC setup then you can have problems launching modded Minecraft.
  • The main thing to watch with MultiMC is that you have all the vanilla and library files (that's Minecraft, LWJGL, Forge, and maybe LiteLoader and more) in the Version tab and all the mod files from the /mods folder, including Galacticraft, in the Loader tab. If you mix them up, it won't work.
  • If you have problems with MultiMC, that's something the Galacticraft team can't support.


Installing Forge

First up, Galacticraft only works for the Windows PC, Mac, or Linux versions of Minecraft (or any other computer which can run Java). You can't play Galacticraft in console (XBox360, Playstation, etc) or mobile (Minecraft Pocket Edition) versions of Minecraft. That's out of our hands, if you want it then go bug Mojang or Microsoft to make mods available in the console versions...

You will need Java of course. You probably have some Java version already if you're playing Minecraft. But to run mods you need, specifically, Java 7 or Java 8. Out of these, we recommend Java 8 - that's jre8. It has some improvements over Java 7. In future Galacticraft 4 and other future mods will require Java 8. [Download Java 8 from Oracle]

To play any mod in Minecraft, you need three things:

  • Minecraft
  • Forge
  • the mod

All three of these need to be a version matching the Minecraft you want to play.

Actually, it's better to think about this as matching the version of the Minecraft to the mod you want to play. So if you want to play Galacticraft 3 (that's our most popular version) then it will have to be either Minecraft 1.7.2 or Minecraft 1.7.10. And frankly, Minecraft 1.7.2 isn't great. So Minecraft 1.7.10 is the one you should be going for.

Download Minecraft 1.7.10 from an official source if you don't have it already. (The Minecraft launcher, under Edit Profile, Use Version, should have a list of all the Minecraft versions available on your installation.) If you don't have it, recently Mojang's main Minecraft download page is only linking to the latest Minecraft versions, but Mojang also makes all the older Minecraft versions available on its official (Amazon-backed) download server. [Download link for the official 1.7.10 version] For earlier versions, many Minecraft community sites will give you the links. Check every download link carefully: as long as it's coming from amazonaws.com that should be from the official source.

Now install Forge for Minecraft 1.7.10. (If you are already playing modded Minecraft, most likely you already did that, so why are you reading this?) It's pretty easy because Forge has an installer you can download - Forge Download page for 1.7.10. Forge has many versions, even after you chose the Minecraft version. Usually there are only very small differences between different Forge versions. The Recommended version is usually fine. Galacticraft is actually happy with pretty much any 1.7.10 version of Forge, for example 1.7.10-10.13.2.1291, or 1.7.10-10.13.4.1448, or 1.7.10-10.13.4.1614, or the latest, should all work. (Note, in Minecraft 1.7.2, Galacticraft requires this specific Forge version: 10.12.2.1147.) If you plan to play on a server with other people, it would be an idea to ask the server owner which exact Forge version the server uses, and use the same. Modpacks may deal with this sort of thing automatically for you.

Installing Forge on Windows

Download the Forge installer for Windows - the 'Installer-win' version. Find the downloaded file, and run it. When you run the Forge installer, it should present you with a short menu with three choices: select 'Install client' and then hit Install. Problems? See Forge official guide.

Installing Forge on a Mac

Download the 'Installer' version of Forge, not the 'Installer - Win' version! This downloads a .jar file.

The .jar file is runnable on your Mac just by double-clicking on it, but on most modern Macs your security settings (Gatekeeper) will cause it to throw this error message when you try that: App can't be opened because it is from an unidentified developer. Have no fear, there is a simple solution. Just Ctrl-click on the .jar file and choose 'Open'. It will give you the same 'App can't be opened ...' error message, but this time there is an extra button you can click, called 'Open'. Click the 'Open' button and the Forge installer should run. Choose 'Install client' and it should automatically install Forge on your Mac.

See also

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Unless stated otherwise, all information contained on this wiki should be considered outdated and might not reflect in-game experiences