phantom
Makes hosted Bedrock/MCPE servers show up as LAN servers, specifically for Xbox.
You can now play on remote servers (not Realms!) on your Xbox with friends.
Installing
Download available soon.
For now, you can clone and build it locally.
Usage
Usage: ./proxy <server-ip>
Options:
-bind string
Bind address and port (default "0.0.0.0:19132")
Building
Makefile builds for macOS, Linux, and Windows.
make
How does this work?
On Minecraft platforms that support LAN servers, the game will broadcast a
server ping packet to every device on the same network and display any valid
replies as connectable servers. This tool runs on your computer - desktop,
laptop, Raspberry Pi, etc. - and pretends to be a LAN server, acting as a proxy,
passing all traffic from your game through your computer and to the server
(and back), so that Minecraft thinks you're connected to a LAN server, but
you're really playing on a remote server. As soon as you start it up, you should
see the fake server listed under LAN and, upon selecting it, connect to the real
Bedrock/MCPE server hosted elsewhere.
For an optimal experience, run this on a device that is connected via ethernet
and not over WiFi, since a wireless connection could introduce some lag. Your
game device can be connected to WiFi. Your remote server can be running on a
computer, a VM, or even with a Minecraft hosting service.
- This tool should work on Windows, macOS, and Linux.
- Only Minecraft for Windows 10, iOS/Android, and Xbox are currently supported.
- Nintendo Switch does not currently have LAN server support.
Note that you almost definitely need to create a firewall rule for this to work
On macOS, you'll be prompted automatically. On Windows, you may need to go into
your Windows Firewall settings and open up port 19132 (UDP).