

The actual game files should too, but since I currently have to use Office Online for e-mail and spreadsheets all that is in the cloud (This WILL change when I rebuild my system and not use a web page for mail). Minecraft is a huge global game, with tens of millions of players on the PC platform, and thus there are always programs like Minecraft Education Edition popping up to help players get more fun out of the game. Since the Curse client installs in "\Users\\appdata\roaming\Curse Client" the client should install on the HDD automatically. You'd have to get elbow deep in hidden MS config files but it would allow you to have a small SSD strictly for the OS and related files used for booting the system and a separate large HDD for the users' home directories, installed software and other large, fairly rapidly changing files. We did this with both Windows NT/2000 servers and OS/2 servers so our user data back-ups could finish overnight. This would isolate user home directories and personal info from boot and system data.

You used to be able to put sub-directories on secondary drives in Windows (standard in Unix) and change the config files to indicate the different drive to use.

I don't know if this would work but an old Unix practice might help.
