Multibeast 1130 Mojave Link
Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes. Installing macOS on non-Apple hardware ("Hackintoshing") is a gray area legally and technically. Always ensure you own a legitimate copy of macOS. MultiBeast is outdated software. Modern Hackintosh builds (2019+) almost exclusively use OpenCore, which is more stable and secure. However, if you have legacy hardware and want to run Mojave, this guide covers the "Classic" method.
Limitations
- No built‑in OpenCore support (Clover only).
- Not compatible with macOS Catalina or later.
- No automatic NVIDIA Web Driver installer (just the boot flag).
- Some kexts are older versions – may need manual update.
While many "pro" Hackintoshers eventually moved toward manual configurations (like OpenCore) to have more control, MultiBeast 11.3.0 remains the defining tool for the "push-button" era. It allowed thousands of people to turn their standard Windows towers into powerful "Mac Pros" during the peak of the Mojave operating system's popularity. multibeast 1130 mojave
In the Hackintosh community, MultiBeast was the "Book of Spells." It was a utility that installed the specific drivers (kexts) and bootloader configurations required to make the hardware sing. Version 11.3.0 was the specific tome tuned for Mojave. Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes
- A separate USB drive (8+ GB) with macOS Mojave installer
- MultiBeast 11.3.0 DMG (post‑install utility)
- Clover or OpenCore bootloader (Clover commonly paired with MultiBeast in Mojave-era guides)
- Kexts folder: FakeSMC or VirtualSMC, Lilu.kext, WhateverGreen.kext, AppleALC.kext, IntelMausi or RealtekRTL8111 kexts, USBInjectAll.kext, NullCPUPowerManagement or CPUFriend where needed
- Proper SSDT/DSDT patches or tools (for CPU power management, USB mapping, etc.)
- Proper EFI configuration (config.plist matched to hardware)