The Minecraft celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, and the manufacturer Mojang released Classic Minecraft for free.
Classic Minecraft is essentially the same Minecraft when it was first developed. In it you had very few blocks to build and no evil mobs to fight. If you want to give it a try, here's how you can play the classic Minecraft for free in one program tours.
Classic Minecraft has limitations, as you may have guessed. You can not save a game, you can not use the regular account Minecraft / Mojang / Microsoft to log in, you cannot join existing ones games and basically anything related to your main account won't work.
You need a keyboard and a mouse, as well as a fairly modern browser for this. Chrome and Firefox do just fine. Even if you have a game controller connected to your system, it will not work with the free game.
You can play up to nine players together and you can play on a small, medium or huge map. Visit this page and she will create a new game for you. Enter a nickname. The site will give you a link that you can share with your friends and invite them to play the same game.
W,A,S and D keys are used to move, Space to jump and F to toggle fog. There are no tools, and the elements "break" with just one click of your mouse.
The game though is an online one application for web will consume a lot of RAM, through the browser. It's a good idea to first make sure that nothing on your system is already consuming too much RAM before starting the game. In general, if you want to play, close the other tabs in your browser.
To be honest, the free game is quite simple, compared to the current Minecraft game, and will not entice you to play for hours. Basically the game is played in creative mode. You can create whatever you want with whatever blocks are available to you. If your friends are involved, you can build together.
If you start a game and leave it, when there are no other players in the game, then the game will be lost (expired). If there are other players in the game, you can continue by visiting the link.