1.1.3 patch

Clearer Pro previews and safer server recovery

SpawnBox 1.1.3 previews locked Pro features instead of just a lock, saves your worlds before any network repair, and fixes two screens that could dead-end.

Highlights

  • · When a Pro feature is locked on your plan, SpawnBox now shows a full, plain-language preview of what it actually does - the problem it solves and exactly what you'd get - right where the feature lives, instead of a bare lock. It's easy to see what each plan includes before you decide.
  • · Fixed two spots that could quietly dead-end. The Base Network view in the player investigation tools was always coming up empty because it never loaded its data - it now shows the bases SpawnBox has detected. And the Discord setup no longer lets you walk all the way through only to hit a wall at the last step.
  • · When SpawnBox repairs a broken network setup, it now saves and cleanly stops your running worlds first, then brings them right back - so a behind-the-scenes recovery can never interrupt a world mid-save. Your progress is protected even when SpawnBox is fixing something for you.
  • · If you run other tools that rely on Windows' built-in Linux support, updating SpawnBox no longer briefly restarts all of them - it now holds its own update back when it detects you're sharing the machine, so your other work keeps running.
  • · The Background Services panel is easier to read: the handful of services simply waiting for your first server now tuck into a single tidy 'waiting to start' group instead of a wall of identical rows, and every row explains itself in plain language the moment you open it.

This release is about clarity and safety: a real look at Pro features before you commit, worlds that stay safe during any behind-the-scenes repair, and two screens that no longer dead-end.

See what Pro does before you decide

When a Pro feature is locked on your plan, SpawnBox now shows a full, plain-language preview of what it actually does: the problem it solves and exactly what you’d get, right where the feature lives, instead of a bare lock. It’s easy to see what each plan includes before you decide.

Two dead-ends, fixed

We fixed two spots that could quietly go nowhere. The Base Network view in the player investigation tools was always coming up empty because it never loaded its data; it now shows the bases SpawnBox has detected. And the Discord setup no longer lets you walk all the way through only to hit a wall at the last step.

Your worlds are saved before any repair

When SpawnBox repairs a broken network setup, it now saves and cleanly stops your running worlds first, then brings them right back. A behind-the-scenes recovery can never interrupt a world mid-save.

Plays nice when you share your PC

If you run other tools that rely on Windows’ built-in Linux support, updating SpawnBox no longer briefly restarts all of them. It now holds its own update back when it detects you’re sharing the machine, so your other work keeps running.

A calmer Background Services panel

The Background Services panel is easier to read. The handful of services simply waiting for your first server now tuck into a single tidy “waiting to start” group instead of a wall of identical rows, and every row explains itself in plain language the moment you open it.