Short answer: yes, but it works by “locating,” not “typing into a coordinate box”

You want to start from a string of latitude/longitude—or “this spot, my home”—and generate the corresponding place in Minecraft. That’s doable. TopoBlocks’s real-map creation supports four ways to locate a spot: place name (like “the Forbidden City”), address, landmark, and current location. If you happen to have a set of coordinates on hand, you can drop to that spot too, then box-select the area to generate on the map.

To be honest about it: it doesn’t treat the “coordinates” as in-game coordinates to be copied block for block. Instead, it first moves the map to that real-world location, then reads public OpenStreetMap data (building footprints, roads, waterways) plus open elevation, and uses open-source tools to generate an approximate reconstruction of the world—not a block-for-block copy of real buildings.

How to generate from coordinates/location

  1. Drop to the target location—go straight to the point for the latitude and longitude; if the exact point can’t be found, search a nearby address or landmark first, then drag the map to fine-tune onto the coordinates.
  2. Fine-tune the spawn point—zoom into the map and line up the spawn point with the block or building you want.
  3. Box-select the area—mark out the generation range. A larger area means a bigger world, a higher price, and a longer generation time; there are 6 area tiers (about 0.2–500 km²). For how to choose the size, see What area size to pick for a real-map generation.
  4. Check the free quality score + 3D preview first—this is the key step. Before generating, you get a free map quality score and a low-resolution 3D preview, so you can judge whether the data for that range is dense enough before deciding whether to pay to generate.

If you want to turn your neighborhood or a specific block into a world, Generate a Minecraft map from an address covers it in more detail.

See it before you buy it—don’t be misled by the word “coordinates”

How well a real place transfers into Minecraft depends largely on how complete that area’s data is in the public maps. City centers and well-known landmarks usually have dense data and look better; remote or sparsely surveyed places come out emptier and flatter. The quality score is an estimate of data coverage, not a guarantee of accuracy—so be sure to take a look with the free quality score and 3D preview before paying, and only generate if you think it’s worth it.

Generating only outputs a brand-new .mcworld file and never overwrites any of your existing worlds or source files. Pricing is tiered by area at a fixed price, failed jobs are refunded automatically, and prices are shown in the app.