Skip to content

zardoy/prismarine-web-client

 
 

Repository files navigation

Minecraft Web Client

banner

A true Minecraft client running in your browser! A port of the original game to the web, written in JavaScript using modern web technologies.

This project is a work in progress, but I consider it to be usable. If you encounter any bugs or usability issues, please report them!

You can try this out at mcraft.fun, pcm.gg (short link) mcon.vercel.app or the GitHub pages deploy. Every commit from the develop (default) branch is deployed to s.mcraft.fun - so it's usually newer, but might be less stable.

Big Features

  • Open any zip world file or even folder in read-write mode!
  • Connect to cracked servers* (it's possible because of proxy servers, see below)
  • Singleplayer mode with simple world generations!
  • Works offline
  • Play with friends over internet! (P2P is powered by Peer.js discovery servers)
  • First-class touch (mobile) & controller support
  • Resource pack support
  • even even more!

Recommended Settings

  • Controls -> Raw Input -> On - This will make the controls more precise
  • Controls -> Touch Controls Type -> Joystick
  • Controls -> Auto Full Screen -> On - To avoid ctrl+w issue
  • Interface -> Chat Select -> On - To select chat messages

World Loading

Zip files and folders are supported. Just drag and drop them into the browser window. You can open folders in readonly and read-write mode. New chunks may be generated incorrectly for now. In case of opening zip files they are stored in your ram entirely, so there is a ~300mb file limit on IOS. Whatever offline mode you used (zip, folder, just single player), you can always export world with the /export command typed in the game chat.

Servers

You can play almost on any server, supporting offline connections. See the Mineflayer repo for the list of supported versions (should support majority of versions). There is a builtin proxy, but you can also host a your one! Just clone the repo, run pnpm i (following CONTRIBUTING.MD) and run pnpm prod-start, then you can specify http://localhost:8080 in the proxy field. MS account authentication will be supported soon.

Rendering

Three.js Renderer

  • Uses WebGL2. Chunks are rendered using Geometry Buffers prepared by 4 mesher workers.
  • Supports FXAA
  • Doesn't support culling

Things that are not planned yet

  • Mods, plugins (basically JARs) support, shaders - since they all are related to specific game pipelines

Advanced Settings

There are many many settings, that are not exposed in the UI yet. You can find or change them by opening the browser console and typing options. You can also change them by typing options.<setting_name> = <value>.

Console

To open the console, press F12, or if you are on mobile, you can type #debug in the URL (browser address bar), it wont't reload the page, but you will see a button to open the console. This way you can change advanced settings and see all errors or warnings. Also this way you can access global variables (described below).

Debugging

It should be easy to build/start the project locally. See CONTRIBUTING.MD for more info.

There is storybook for fast UI development. Run pnpm storybook to start it. There is world renderer playground (link).

However, there are many things that can be done in online version. You can access some global variables in the console and useful examples:

  • localStorage.debug = '*' - Enables all debug messages! Warning: this will start all packets spam. Instead I recommend setting options.debugLogNotFrequentPackets. Also you can use debugTopPackets (with JSON.stringify) to see what packets were received/sent by name

  • bot - Mineflayer bot instance. See Mineflayer documentation for more.

  • viewer - Three.js viewer instance, basically does all the rendering.

  • viewer.world.sectionObjects - Object with all active chunk sections (geometries) in the world. Each chunk section is a Three.js mesh or group.

  • debugSceneChunks - The same as above, but relative to current bot position (e.g. 0,0 is the current chunk).

  • debugChangedOptions - See what options are changed. Don't change options here.

  • localServer/server - Only for singleplayer mode/host. Flying Squid server instance, see it's documentation for more.

  • localServer.overworld.storageProvider.regions - See ALL LOADED region files with all raw data.

  • nbt.simplify(someNbt) - Simplifies nbt data, so it's easier to read.

The most useful thing in devtools is the watch expression. You can add any expression there and it will be re-evaluated in real time. For example, you can add viewer.camera.position to see the camera position and so on.

Watch expression

You can also drag and drop any .dat or .mca (region files) into the browser window to see it's contents in the console.

F3 Keybindings

  • F3 - Toggle debug overlay
  • F3 + A - Reload all chunks (these that are loaded from the server)
  • F3 + G - Toggle chunk sections (geometries) border visibility + entities outline (aka Three.js geometry helpers)

world chunks have a yellow border, hostile mobs have a red outline, passive mobs have a green outline, players have a blue outline.

Query Parameters

Press Y to set query parameters to url of your current game state.

  • ?server=<server_address> - Display connect screen to the server on load
  • ?username=<username> - Set the username on load
  • ?proxy=<proxy_address> - Set the proxy server address on load
  • ?version=<version> - Set the version on load
  • ?reconnect=true - Reconnect to the server on page reloads. Available in dev mode only and very useful on server testing.
  • ?loadSave=<save_name> - Load the save on load with the specified folder name (not title)
  • ?singleplayer=1 - Create empty world on load. Nothing will be saved
  • ?noSave=true - Disable auto save on unload / disconnect / export. Only manual save with /save command will work

Notable Things that Power this Project

About

Minecraft online web client & server running in your browser [IOS SUPPORTED]

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 78.0%
  • JavaScript 16.9%
  • CSS 4.0%
  • HTML 1.1%