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Downgrading is the act of loading a world in an older version than the version of that world last loaded. This article explains how to downgrade a Minecraft world, and benefits and consequences of downgrading a world.
Before trying the methods below, it is recommended that the user has a backup of their selected world; after downgrading it may cause the world to be prone to corruption, data loss or crash. See ยง Benefits and consequences for more information.
In the singleplayer menu, if a world was last loaded in a version newer than the one being run, the version name of the world is displayed in red. When moving the mouse over the world, an exclamation mark appears to the left of the play button in the world icon on the left. While hovering over the world icon, the exclamation mark turns red and a tooltip appears with red text stating: "World was saved in a newer version, loading this world could cause problems!". Trying to load the world causes a screen to pop up with text that says:
The screen also has three buttons: "Create Backup and Load", "I know what I'm doing!", and "Cancel". The actions when clicking are shown in the table below.
| Key | Action | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Create Backup and Load | Creates a backup and then proceeds to load the world. | Also shows a toast indicating that the world backed up successfully. |
| I know what I'm doing! | Opens the world without making a backup. | |
| Cancel | Takes the user back to the world selection screen. |
When downgrading a world, the version of the world when it was last loaded will change to the current version.
Downgrading a world to Beta has no change. To downgrade a world to below Beta 1.2_02, rename the world folder to World<number from 1โ5>, and you will succeed. Attempting to downgrade to Alpha will crash the game or succeed.
Aside from the downgrading screen, one can also use unofficial third-party softwares such as MCC Tool Chest, using tools from the program to convert world chunks from new versions to old versions.
You can't normally downgrade directly or an error will happen. However, there are some workarounds depending on which platform you are on:
On Windows, one can use Bedrock Launcher, an unofficial launcher that allows running older versions of Minecraft: Bedrock Edition. The world can then be imported from the minecraftWorlds folder to the older version, where you can load it from there.[needs testing]
Older versions of Minecraft on Android/Minecraft: Pocket Edition can be downloaded and installed via the Aurora Store. You can obtain the version codes from the Omniarchive Index (work in progress). Alternatively, you can simply just download the APK file for the version you want to install, such as from this archive.org link and load the world from that version.
To downgrade a world in iOS, sideload the version of Bedrock Edition you want to downgrade to. This is not recommended due to security risks.
Benefits
Consequences
level.dat to be 0, something which is normally impossible, but causes every other downgraded world to look identical.