Does Windows 10 support CubeCraft?
Yesterday, I bought the Windows 10 beta version of Minecraft. My daughter wants to play CubeCraft, but I cannot connect to the play.cubecraft.net server.
I opened the port in the firewall, so that is not the solution. Can anyone tell me if she can play CubeCraft games in Win10? What do we need to do?
Best Answer
The Windows 10 version of Minecraft is essentially the pocket edition, and cannot connect to conventional servers that are for the Java version of Minecraft.
If you want to connect to PC Minecraft servers, you need the PC Java version of Minecraft, which does work on Windows 10.
If you want to connect to Pocket Editon servers, the Windows 10 version or mobile versions can connect to them.
Pictures about "Does Windows 10 support CubeCraft?"



Can you play on CubeCraft on PC?
To play on CubeCraft (Java Edition) you will need a Minecraft Java account. You can purchase one of these from the official website. Step 1. Open Minecraft Java edition select the version you would like to run.What version does CubeCraft use?
Recently, Cubecraft officially dropped support for Minecraft clients below 1.12. This means players on Java Edition will need to use a Minecraft version ranging from version 1.12 to the latest one in order to join the server.Can u play CubeCraft on bedrock?
To play on CubeCraft (Bedrock Edition) you will need a Minecraft on your device and an Xbox Live account. You can learn more on the official website.Is CubeCraft crossplay between Java and bedrock?
So, you're certain that "CubeCraft Java" and "CubeCraft Bedrock" are completely separate servers, just run by the same people? Yup, the mod teams are very similar, but in terms of crossplay they're 100% separate.Playing Minigames in Cubecraft server - Minecraft! (Bedrock Edition / PC version/ Windows 10)
More answers regarding does Windows 10 support CubeCraft?
Answer 2
No.
Windows 10 edition of Minecraft can only connect to Minecraft: Bedrock Edition servers, not Java Edition servers.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Pixabay, Mikhail Nilov, Mikhail Nilov, Christina Watkins
