How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate]

How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate] - Apples on wooden board near figures of flowers and bird

I don't want to have to deal with terrain when I am rebuilding someone's world on PC Minecraft. They started their world before 1.8 and so I cannot look at F3 to find the seed. Does anyone have an answer?



Best Answer

Run the command '/seed' to find the seed of the world. Sadly you can't copy-paste it though.




Pictures about "How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate]"

How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate] - Shallow Focus Photography of White Boneset Flower
How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate] - Small yard with huge monster creature figures constructed of old tyres on playground full of children
How to figure out someone's seed in Minecraft? [duplicate] - Playground in suburb yard with metal slide and huge robot made of pile of old rubber tyres



How do you find someones Minecraft seed?

The simplest way to find the seed of a Minecraft server is to use the command box.
  • Load into the Minecraft world with the seed you want to copy.
  • Press \u201c/\u201d to open the console. ...
  • Type \u201cseed\u201d without quotes. ...
  • Press Enter.
  • Copy down the seed code that appears in the chat window.


  • Does F3 show seed?

    The seed in multiplayer has been made hidden from the debug screen and now shows as "0". Pressing F3 ( Fn + F3 on Mac and some laptops) brings up the debug screen, but without the graphs. The graph appears upon pressing \u21e7 Shift + F3 ( Fn + \u21e7 Shift + F3 on Mac and some laptops).

    How do you check your seed in multiplayer?

    To make sure that it is the correct seed, simply make a new singleplayer world with that seed and check the coordinates by pressing F3. You can then go to your multiplayer world, to see if the world looks the same by going to the coordinates that you checked in your singleplayer world.

    What are the chances of getting the same seed in Minecraft twice?

    Since all Minecraft worlds are infinite who's to say every world isn't the same seed? That's like a 10% chance of that ever happening.



    Candace Bertotti | Mastering the Art of Getting to Know Someone




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

    Images: TIVASEE, Dan Hamill, Ryutaro Tsukata, Ryutaro Tsukata