In the Game Manager Panel, players have access to a range of gameplay and difficulty options that tailor their gaming experience to their preferences.
These options encompass various aspects of gameplay, such as configuring the game mode (Survival, Creative, etc.), enabling or disabling cheats, adjusting difficulty settings (Peaceful, Easy, Normal, Hard), and fine-tuning world generation parameters.
This flexibility allows players to create custom game worlds that cater to their desired level of challenge and playstyle, whether they seek a creative and relaxed building experience or a hardcore survival adventure.
Update Gameplay and Difficulty Configuration
- Log into the Game Management Panel
- Select your Minecraft instance, then click the Manage button to the right
- In the main menu, click the Configuration link
- Navigate to Gameplay and Difficulty
- Adjust the options as desired
- Force Game Mode
- Enabling this will cause users that join using the Game Mode that is set in the next section instead of the one they were set to when they last logged in
- Game Mode
- This is where you can set the default mode users who log into your Minecraft game server will automatically be set to
- Keep in mind that this setting can be adjusted in-game
- If you enable the Force Game Mode option, all players who changed their mode will switch back to this one when they log in
- You can select from the following settings
- Survival
- Creative
- Adventure
- Spectator
- Difficulty
- Select how hard you want to Minecraft game on your server to be here
- Choose from the following options
- Peaceful
- Easy
- Normal
- Hard
- Op permission level
- An Op or Operator is like an Administrator within the game
- They can have elevated privileges to change settings or grant permissions to other users
- The higher the number, the more power and permission an Op will have
- You can choose from the following privileges
- 1: Bypass spawn protection
- 2: Change game settings
- 3: Kick/ban/op players
- 4: Stop the server
- Function permission level
- Functions are commands that can be run on the Minecraft Game server
- This is where you can set their permission level
- Higher numbers have more privileges, and you can choose from the following options
- 1: Bypass spawn protection
- 2: Change game settings
- 3: Kick/ban/op players
- 4: Stop the server
TIP: We recommend bookmarking our guide on Using the Minecraft Console.
- Spawn Protection Radius
- When using the Spigot plugin, this setting is how much “safe” space a user gets around the spawn point
- The number is how many blocks of space a user gets
- Hardcore Mode
- If you enable the Hardcore Mode option, any user that dies will be banned permanently from the server
- Allow Monsters
- If this is enabled, monsters such as creepers and spiders will be allowed to spawn within the game world
- Allow Animals
- Enable this option to allow animals such as sheep and chickens to spawn within the game world
- Allow NPCs
- NPC stands for non-player characters
- Enabling this option allows other people to be spawned within a game
- Allow v.s. Player combat (PvP)
- Enabling this will allow player-vs-player fighting within the game world
- Allow Flight
- Enable this setting if you want players to be able to fly while playing in the “survival” game mode
- Allow Command Blocks
- A command block works along with Redstone and can be used to automatically trigger console commands
- Enable this to allow them within the game world
- Player idle timeout minutes
- Here you can enter how many minutes a user can be inactive before being removed from the game
- Use Whitelist
- If you enable this setting, only users that are “whitelisted” will be able to connect to your Minecraft game server
- Max tick time
- Learn more about ticks at the official Minecraft Wiki
- If a tick takes too long to complete it may indicate an issue such as an unresponsive server
- Here you can set how many milliseconds a tick can take before the server is stopped
- For example, if this is set to 60,000 milliseconds, it would allow 60 seconds for a tick to complete
- This is well over the typical 0.05 seconds that should be required and may indicate a problem
- Max build height
- The number here sets how many blocks high a user is allowed to build
- Force Game Mode
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