Raspbian is installed on your Raspberry Pi. This will allow you to find Minecraft Pi in the Games section. Minecraft Pi is a bare-bones version of the well-known survival game that was designed to students learn various programming languages. It's certainly entertaining but it's not the Minecraft game we love to. A group of Raspberry Pi users has figured out how to install Minecraft fully-featured on your Raspberry Pi 2, or 3. There's a lot to edit and tweaking with files and Terminal commands, just like everything on the Raspberry Pi. It is recommended to take your time and read through each step. Be aware that before you dive in there are some important things you should know: You will need to know your Mojang account log-in info, along with your Minecraft username. You will need a paid Minecraft license. You can purchase one at Minecraft.net This guide is for Minecraft 1.8.9. However, with a small modification, you can run the most current version, which is currently 1.9.4 (more about this later). While Minecraft isn't the most enjoyable experience on an expensive computer It is certainly possible to play it. Spend an hour putting everything together. I recommend opening the guide using your Raspberry Pi's browser and then putting an Terminal window next to it. You'll need to download some altered log files from Dropbox. I don't want to share the commands here only to see them modified later on. The process is simple it requires you to copy Terminal commands from your browser, and then paste them into the command line. After you've entered each command, press the Enter key on the keyboard. Your Pi will take care of the rest. Tips to make the process as smooth as you can Here are some tips I have come up with to help make the process as smoothly as you can: Raspberry Pi 3 users are exempt from step 1. You are not able to overclock the Pi 3 In addition that, the Pi 3 is actually faster out of the box than the recommended overclock speed of the Pi 2. After entering Step 4's command After entering Step 4, use the arrow keys on your keyboard to highlight Advanced options, then press Enter. Then highlight GL Options, select Enable. Step 7 in the guide confused me. It says click "edit profile" however, you actually need to click Profile Editor and then double-click the first list. Under Version Selection click on the drop-down next to Use version and select the build number. Be aware that the guide defaults to 1.8.9. At present, we recommend using this version, and we can switch it once everything is working. Step 10 requires you to edit "run.sh" without any further instructions. Open the Minecraft folder within your Pi directory, right-click the run.sh file and choose Text Editor. There are two options to launch Minecraft. To launch Minecraft, the guide will tell you that you should use "./run.sh". Although this works, you will need to enter "cd Minecraft", before entering the command. Another option is to open the Minecraft folder and double-click on the run.sh file. After that, you can select "Execute." Install the most current version So once you've got everything working you can begin experimenting with the installation. To upgrade to the most recent Minecraft version, you'll need to relaunch Minecraft.jar. In a Terminal window enter the following command:"cd" Minecraft Next, enter: java -jar Minecraft.jar Click on Profile Editor then change the version to 1.9.4 (or whatever the most recent version is). Save your changes, then click the Play button to force Minecraft to download the latest version. Then open the Minecraft folder. In order to eliminate any issues if you make a mistake, you should take two seconds and create a copy of the run.sh file. Rename it to something alone the lines of "runcopy.sh". With a copy safely hidden away open the run.sh file by right-clicking on it and selecting Text Editor. Press Ctrl-F on your keyboard and enter 1.8.9 in the text field. Plugins There should be at most two instances. Replace each one with the latest version of Minecraft (this is the same version you selected in step 3). Save the file, then reboot your Raspberry Pi. Launch Minecraft as you normally would and enjoy.