Mojang is the Swedish studio behind Minecraft, the voxel-based sandbox that evolved from a modest Java applet into a cultural phenomenon spanning creative building, survival exploration, educational projects, and large-scale multiplayer economies. The company’s current catalog pivots on two core components: the Minecraft Launcher, a unified desktop client that manages both the Java and Bedrock editions, updates, mod profiles, and cross-save authentication, and the Bedrock Dedicated Server, a lightweight headless binary that lets players host persistent multiplayer worlds on Windows or Linux hardware without the graphical client. Together these tools support an unusually wide spectrum of use cases—children learning logic with Redstone circuitry, architects prototyping cities in Creative mode, network engineers containerizing scalable mini-game hubs, and educators running modded lesson servers that teach STEM concepts through interactive quests. Because the launcher acts as a modular gateway, users can instantly switch between vanilla survival, snapshot betas, or heavily modded Fabric and Forge environments, while the dedicated server software enables hobbyists to run 24/7 realms with behavioral packs, scripting APIs, and marketplace content synchronization. Mojang’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the latest upstream versions and allowing batch installation of multiple applications.

Bedrock Dedicated Server

Official multiplayer server software for Minecraft Bedrock

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Minecraft Launcher

Official launcher for Minecraft, a sandbox voxel game

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