minecraft
"Classic" redirects here. For the world size in Legacy Console Edition, see World size. For the Classic 0.0.23a_01 remake, see Classic 0.0.23a_01 (remake).
For a guide about all the additions and changes in this phase, see Java Edition guides/Classic releases.

Classic was the second phase in the development cycle of Minecraft (Java Edition), following pre-classic and preceding Indev, and was the first Minecraft development stage to have some of its versions released to the public. This phase was commonly named "alpha" during its development until June 28, 2010, when a blog post retroactively labeled it as "Minecraft Classic".[1] Creative and later Survival game modes were introduced in this phase.

The release of Survival mode in Classic was conducted in a series of tests named Survival Test. It was a very early version of the game mode. The test had a point-based system, where the player could acquire points from killing some of the game's first mobs. Even after Classic was phased out, Survival Test was still playable until the website received a major overhaul on December 16, 2010, where it was quietly removed.

Classic does not support many of the main features in the current versions such as crafting or a proper inventory. Indev through Beta 1.7 did not contain a "creative" mode, so players continued to use Classic for building things that would take too long in newer versions. The addition of Creative mode in Beta 1.8 rendered Classic functionality obsolete.

In the narrow, most commonly used sense, "Classic" refers to all versions between 0.0.2a and 0.30. In the broadest meaning, it refers to all versions between mc-161607 and 0.31, thus including all of pre-Classic and most of Java Edition Indev.

Features

For individual changes in each version, see Java Edition version history § Classic.

Early Classic

Multiplayer Test

Survival Test

Versions

Website availability

The latest version of the Classic Creative game mode was playable for free on Minecraft's website. After the release of Infdev it was no longer updated and only kept for historical purposes. According to Notch, he planned on "slowly phasing it out", but "won't remove it, though. Just hide it."[2] It was playable in both singleplayer and multiplayer variations.

With the release of Beta 1.8 on September 14, 2011, Mojang removed the Classic resources directory and the addresses it was referring to for saving, possibly as a step towards phasing it out.[citation needed] As a result, sounds no longer worked and saving levels to the online server became impossible. Worlds that were not backed up locally were lost.

On August 8, 2012, the link on the website to Classic was removed, but re-added after many complaints.[citation needed] On July 1, 2013, because of the new launcher being able to play Classic, the link to Classic was removed again,[citation needed] though the page remained playable. The Classic game at that page went unsupported for some time, meanwhile, several major browsers increased their default Java security to the point where the game became essentially unplayable, until at some point between September 10[3] and 12[4] 2015, the page containing Classic was itself removed entirely.

On May 7, 2019, a recreated JavaScript version of Java Edition Classic 0.0.23a_01 was made available to play on the Minecraft website as part of the game’s tenth-anniversary celebrations.[5]

Videos

YouTube

Trivia

Gallery

See also

References

  1. "The server is back up!" (archived)The Word of Notch, June 28, 2010.
  2. "Minecraft" (archived) .
  3. "Minecraft Classic Edition" (archived) .
  4. "Not found" (archived) .
  5. Minecraft Classic
  6. "TigIRC logs" – Archive.org, May 16, 2009, UTC–4. "(12:07:06) notch: minecraft alpha is available. I need someone on windows, someone on mac and someone on linux!"
  7. File: Wurm Online 0.0.19a.jpg