Geometry Dash 1.1 Private Server
Update 1.1 was famous for introducing the mirror portal, which flips the screen upside down and backward. Private servers see a heavy revival of this polarizing mechanic. How to Play and Join a 1.1 Private Server
Open the app and create your account via the in-game settings profile menu. Tips for Creating Content in 1.1
While a 1.1 private server mimics the vintage aesthetic, hosting one today usually integrates a mix of classic limitations and modern server stabilities: Geometry Dash 1.1 Private Server
Use an APK editor or hex editor to locate the official RobTop server URLs inside the 1.1 game files and replace them with your custom server domain.
: Encourage users to recreate "lost" levels from the original 1.1 era that may have been deleted from the official servers over the last decade. How to make a Geometry Dash Private Server [TUTORIAL] Update 1
Released in September 2013, Update 1.1 was only the second major update in Geometry Dash's history, but it laid the groundwork for much of what the game would become:
To develop this server, you will primarily use the Cvolton GDPS Emulator , which is the industry standard for private server backends. : Tips for Creating Content in 1
You can build levels using the primitive 1.1 editor (Blocks, spikes, jump rings, and the ship portal only) and upload them directly to the server. Other players can search, download, and rate your creations.
Steam and the App Store do not allow you to downgrade to 1.1. If you buy Geometry Dash on Steam today, you are forced to play 2.2. The only way to legally experience 1.1 is to own an old iOS device with the original purchase—but even then, online features are dead. The private server is the way to restore online functionality.
Use an APK editor to modify the libcocos2dcpp.so file (or equivalent) to change the server endpoint URLs.


