Table of Contents
Who this is for: Minecraft players wanting to play with friends without setting up dedicated servers or dealing with complex networking.
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Setting Up Hamachi for Minecraft
Hamachi creates a virtual private network that tricks Minecraft into thinking you’re on the same local network as your friends. This lets you play together without setting up a dedicated server or dealing with port forwarding.
Download and Install Hamachi
Head to LogMeIn’s website and download Hamachi for free. Install it on every computer that wants to join your Minecraft session. You’ll need to create a LogMeIn account during setup, but the basic version handles up to 5 players without any cost.
Create Your Network
One person becomes the “host” and creates a new network in Hamachi. Click the power button to turn on Hamachi, then hit “Create a new network.” Pick a network name and password that you can share with friends. Keep the network name simple since everyone will need to type it exactly.
Join the Network
Other players open Hamachi and select “Join an existing network.” They’ll enter the network name and password the host created. Once connected, everyone should see each other’s computers listed in the Hamachi window with IP addresses starting with 25.x.x.x.
Start Your Minecraft World
The host opens their Minecraft world in single-player mode, then presses Esc and clicks “Open to LAN.” Choose your game mode settings and click “Start LAN World.” Minecraft will display a port number – write this down since others might need it.
Connect to the Host
Friends open Minecraft’s multiplayer menu and click “Add Server” or “Direct Connect.” They’ll enter the host’s Hamachi IP address (the 25.x.x.x number) followed by a colon and the port number if needed. Most of the time, just the IP address works fine.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
If connection fails, check that everyone’s Hamachi shows a solid green dot next to their name. Yellow triangles or red X’s indicate network problems. Windows Firewall sometimes blocks Hamachi, so you might need to allow it through your firewall settings. Some players find success by temporarily disabling their firewall entirely while testing the connection.
The host’s computer needs to stay online for everyone to keep playing, and closing the Minecraft world will disconnect all players. For those wanting to explore more building and survival adventures, there are plenty of creative options to discover.
TL;DR
Install Hamachi on all computers, create/join a network, open Minecraft world to LAN, then connect using the host’s Hamachi IP address.
