Mojang has patched out the most notorious Hardcore mode exploits in Minecraft, with the 26.2 Pre-Release 5 update officially closing the LAN loopholes that players have used for years to cheat death. The full fix goes live with the complete 26.2 update on June 16.
The exploit that was hiding in plain sight
Here's the thing: Hardcore mode is supposed to be Minecraft's ultimate test. One life, no second chances, and a world that locks you out the moment you die. The premise is brutal by design. But for years, a well-known workaround existed that made the whole thing feel optional.
Players discovered they could exit their Hardcore save and reload it in LAN mode. That single step opened two separate escape hatches. First, it allowed them to switch the gamemode entirely, turning a locked Hardcore world into a standard survival save where respawning is just fine. Second, LAN mode let players enable commands, which could be used to flip settings, grant advantages, or otherwise sidestep the difficulty that makes Hardcore runs meaningful.
The result was a mode that looked like Hardcore on the surface but had a trapdoor underneath.
What 26.2 Pre-Release 5 actually changes
Mojang confirmed in the patch notes that these exploits are "no longer available in Hardcore mode worlds." Both the gamemode-switching path and the commands-via-LAN path are closed. There is no longer a way to use LAN mode as a bypass to keep a Hardcore run alive after death.
The fix is clean and targeted. It does not change how Hardcore mode plays during a normal run. The only thing gone is the escape route.

Patch notes confirm the fix
Why this matters beyond just one mode
Beating Hardcore Minecraft has always carried weight in the community. Content creators have built entire series around it, and "100 days in Hardcore" videos have become a genre of their own on YouTube. The problem is that with the exploit available, there was no reliable way to know whether a run was legitimate. The badge of honor had an asterisk attached.
With the loopholes gone, a completed Hardcore world now means something concrete. No escape hatches, no resets dressed up as survival. What most players miss is that this also shifts the content creator side of things significantly. Creators who relied on the LAN workaround to recover from accidental deaths mid-series will need to either play genuinely or rethink their format entirely.
The key here is that Mojang did not add any new mechanics here. They simply removed the ability to circumvent existing ones. The game itself is unchanged for anyone playing it straight.
Chaos Cubed brings more than just fixes
The Hardcore patch is not the only headline in the 26.2 update. The Chaos Cubed content drop arrives alongside it, adding the Sulfur Caves biome, the Sulfur Cube mob, and new blocks tied to the sulfur theme. If you want to get ahead of the new content, the Minecraft guides collection has everything you need on the Chaos Cubed additions before June 16 arrives.








