Multibeast 1130 Mojave

Under Bootloaders, check "Clover UEFI Boot Mode" (for modern BIOS with CSM disabled) or "Clover Legacy Boot Mode" (for older BIOS). For Mojave on a 2020-era build, UEFI is mandatory.

The room was dark, illuminated only by the cold blue wash of a monitor. It was 2018, and the air was thick with anticipation—and the faint smell of overheated circuitry from a Gigabyte Z370 motherboard.

Elias stared at the screen. He had just finished the installation of macOS Mojave. It was a triumph of engineering will, a forbidden act of alchemy that turned standard PC parts into a pseudo-Mac. But he wasn't done. The installation was just the raw clay; he needed to sculpt it into something usable.

On the desktop sat a single, ominous icon: MultiBeast 11.3.0.

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.

Elias cracked his knuckles. He knew the stakes. One wrong checkbox, one incorrect audio ID, and the system would vanish upon reboot, replaced by the dreaded "prohibited" sign or an endless loop of white text on a black screen.

He double-clicked the icon. The interface opened, a grid of abstract icons and tabs. He navigated to the Drivers section.

"Okay," he whispered to the silence. "Audio. Everyone messes up the audio." multibeast 1130 mojave

He selected Audio > Realtek ALC1220. He chose the layout ID 1. It was a guess, a coin flip between 1, 2, 3, or 7. If he was wrong, he’d have no sound. If he was very wrong, the kernel would panic and the machine would die.

Next, the networking. Network > IntelMausi. A safe bet. Essential for getting online to fix the inevitable mistakes.

Then, the most critical part: the bootloader. This was 2018; the transition was happening. The old guard used Clover, but the new prophets were preaching OpenCore. Elias, a creature of habit, stuck with Clover v2.4k. It was the anchor of MultiBeast 11.3.0.

He moved to the Settings tab.

"Build," he muttered, hovering the mouse over the button. "Save the kingdom."

He clicked Build. The drive whirred. Text scrolled in a terminal window. Files were copied. Permissions were repaired.

Then, the moment of truth.

He closed MultiBeast. He took a deep breath, opened the Apple Menu, and hit Restart.

The screen went black. Then, the familiar flash of the Clover boot screen appeared. He selected the boot drive. The Apple logo appeared. The progress bar began its slow, agonizing crawl.

Five percent... Twenty percent...

Elias sweated. In the MultiBeast 11.3.0 era, the "stuck at 2 minutes" error was the silent killer. It meant you forgot a USB port limit patch or messed up the SMBIOS.

But the bar kept moving.

It cleared the halfway mark. The screen flickered—the graphics driver was kicking in. The resolution shifted.

Then, the screen flashed white, and the desktop reappeared. Sound. He clicked the volume icon. It was full. He clicked Safari. It loaded. Under Bootloaders , check "Clover UEFI Boot Mode"

Elias leaned back in his chair, exhaling a breath he felt he’d been holding for three hours. He opened "About This Mac." It read: iMac Pro (Late 2017).

He had fooled the machine. With MultiBeast 11.3.0 as his brush and Mojave as his canvas, he had painted a masterpiece of deception.

"For now," he whispered, knowing that the next OS update would likely break everything all over again. But for tonight, the Hackintosh purred.

Here’s a feature overview for MultiBeast 11.3.0 (often shortened to “1130”) running on macOS Mojave (10.14.x). This version was specifically updated for Mojave’s requirements, including support for APFS, dark mode, and Mojave’s security changes.


  • Wifi: MultiBeast has limited support for WiFi. If you have a Broadcom card, you may need to download AirportBrcmFixup manually later.
  • Click the "Build" button in the bottom right corner. Choose your target volume (your Mojave SSD). Click "Install." MultiBeast will write the Clover bootloader to the EFI partition and inject the kexts into /Library/Extensions (or the EFI/CLOVER/kexts folder depending on your "Bootloader" selection).

    Restart your computer. Eject the USB installer. In BIOS, set your SSD as the primary boot drive. If you see the Clover boot screen with the Apple logo, you have succeeded.

    MultiBeast is a free, all-in-one post-installation utility. While Clover (the bootloader) or OpenCore gets your system running, MultiBeast makes it functional. Version 11.3.0 was specifically curated for macOS Mojave (10.14.4 through 10.14.6). It automates the injection of kexts (kernel extensions), installation of network drivers, audio patching (AppleALC), and bootloader configuration. "Build," he muttered, hovering the mouse over the button

    Key Features of version 11.3.0: