So recently I’ve been having some problems with my Minecraft disc. I’m not sure if it’s because an update or something, but Ive seen other people say they have a similar problem, but haven’t seen a real solution.
So here’s what happened:
I didn’t play Minecraft for a ten day period while I was on vacation (this isn’t the first time I hadn’t played for an extended period of time) and I get back and decide to play. When I go to enter my world, the console crashes. I turn it off, and turn it back on, hoping it would fix the problem. But then, I get a notification saying something is wrong with my Xbox Live. I spent an hour trying to fix THAT problem, but I never managed to do it. After I tested the connection for the last time, I went into Minecraft, and all the updates had been stripped away. I had the original 360 version instead.
This is has happened to me before. The first time it happened, I logged in with my account, and I couldn’t move my characters head (I still can’t move my characters head on that account to this day). Getting a new disc fixed the problem. But when I went bought a new disc and tried it out, nothing was fixed. I tried to make a new world, but the game crashed again. Has this happened to anyone and does anyone have a solution?
The game reverts back to original version when there is a problem with the update file. It either didn't download completely or is corrupted. From the main menu go to 'Options' and 'Reinstall Content' and it should fix it.
The no head moving thing is something that happens after an update sometimes, you need to reset your controller settings, one of the slider bars gets turned all the way down for some reason.
All of our Xbox Live and Microsoft account stuff is under my wife's profile.
She created a new profile to play Minecraft with the family that does require her to sign into anything; a.) this cuts down on the time it takes her to join us, b.) it keeps it from trying run an update the moment she signs on and consequently bricking the 360.
We have a 7 and 9 year old, so we rarely let the 360 "talk" to the internet.
So recently I’ve been having some problems with my Minecraft disc. I’m not sure if it’s because an update or something, but Ive seen other people say they have a similar problem, but haven’t seen a real solution.
So here’s what happened:
I didn’t play Minecraft for a ten day period while I was on vacation (this isn’t the first time I hadn’t played for an extended period of time) and I get back and decide to play. When I go to enter my world, the console crashes. I turn it off, and turn it back on, hoping it would fix the problem. But then, I get a notification saying something is wrong with my Xbox Live. I spent an hour trying to fix THAT problem, but I never managed to do it. After I tested the connection for the last time, I went into Minecraft, and all the updates had been stripped away. I had the original 360 version instead.
This is has happened to me before. The first time it happened, I logged in with my account, and I couldn’t move my characters head (I still can’t move my characters head on that account to this day). Getting a new disc fixed the problem. But when I went bought a new disc and tried it out, nothing was fixed. I tried to make a new world, but the game crashed again. Has this happened to anyone and does anyone have a solution?
The game reverts back to original version when there is a problem with the update file. It either didn't download completely or is corrupted. From the main menu go to 'Options' and 'Reinstall Content' and it should fix it.
The no head moving thing is something that happens after an update sometimes, you need to reset your controller settings, one of the slider bars gets turned all the way down for some reason.
All of our Xbox Live and Microsoft account stuff is under my wife's profile.
She created a new profile to play Minecraft with the family that does require her to sign into anything; a.) this cuts down on the time it takes her to join us, b.) it keeps it from trying run an update the moment she signs on and consequently bricking the 360.
We have a 7 and 9 year old, so we rarely let the 360 "talk" to the internet.