How different is Demo world from a regular world?

How different is Demo world from a regular world? - Top view of creative world continents made of various nuts and assorted dried fruits on white background in light room

I downloaded the Minecraft demo and started working, after the free 100 minutes, I bought the game and keep on playing that demo world.

Now, after 10h I've found that Demo world is always the same but I don't know how different it is from a regular "new game in singleplayer" world.

Should I start a new game using a random generated world or am I going to find the same elements than in the demo world?.

I recently found redstone and some diamonds, have sheep and some crops... so if I start a new game it's going to be a pain, but it'll be worse if I wait another 10h more...






Pictures about "How different is Demo world from a regular world?"

How different is Demo world from a regular world? - Faceless person making world map with nuts and dried fruits
How different is Demo world from a regular world? - Free stock photo of activist, banner, blue
How different is Demo world from a regular world? - Free stock photo of action, activist, administration



How is Minecraft demo different?

Functionality. The demo version functionally serves to allow the players to try out the game before deciding to buy Minecraft. It allows players to play on a single world for a 100-minute (5 in-game days) period before the map is locked and required to be reset.

Does Minecraft demo world save?

It uses the same save location as when Minecraft is run from your harddrive, so all your worlds will be right there in your world list if you install the local version, so long as it's the same computer as you've been playing the demo on.

What can you do in Minecraft demo?

Trial Version Features For those unaware, the Minecraft trial version is time-limited to 90 minutes of in-game time.



How to play other world in Minecraft Demo version(Java)




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Monstera, Monstera, Markus Spiske, Markus Spiske