MINECRAFT UPCOMING Lastest Update!
The 'Minecraft' World Goes Long (And Deep) With Its Latest Update
© Mojang Studios / Washington Post image
Mojang Studios, the engineer of "Minecraft," is redesigning the genesis of the block world "Minecraft", which changes the way the sandbox game weighs millions of its players.
In a long-awaited review, appropriately entitled “Caves and Rocks,” the game engine will begin to build deeper caves, higher mountains for players to explore, and introduce more variety of plants and animals they can encounter. The company announced Wednesday that it plans to release the November 30 update.
When someone starts the world in “Minecraft,” the game uses process production to create forests, rivers, caves and mountains across the map. Over the past 12 years, Minecraft has introduced areas such as deserts and seas for players to explore but Mojang developers are now expanding the upper and lower boundaries of the world to produce previously unpopular peaks and valleys. game.
More than 100 million people play Minecraft every month. A blocky, low-fi game is a collection of space for server players to join and build with. UC Berkeley students once hosted a graduation ceremony inside the “Minecraft” server during the covid-19 violence. His players also rebuilt the famed Harry Potter castle of Hogwarts, Notre Dame, the Empire State Building and ancient Rome. It is difficult to find a well-known building - real life or myth - that is nowhere near another "Minecraft" server.
"For the whole generation of kids, that's the kind of place they go," said Kurt Squire, a professor at the University of California Irvine who is studying how games can be used to help students learn. "The playground, the sandbox they grew up in."
The impressive success of Minecraft is due, in part, to the simplicity of the game. There are no goals or activities in “Minecraft.” (There is a final manager, but he is completely free.) You decide what to check or build. But with all the reviews, there is a natural risk that the game becomes too difficult for beginners to understand. Agnes Larsson, "Minecraft's" Director of the game, said this is something the Mojang Studios team spends a lot of time thinking about. " The team wants to continue developing "Minecraft" for "many, many years" but Larsson said they need to keep the game's basic goals - to keep "Minecraft-y," figuratively speaking.
"We have something amazing," said Larsson. "It's a fun game but we can still add some things to it in the right way."
Larsson is currently working on the game's creative approach "to really help us transform," while defending the simple beauty of "Minecraft." Larsson often speaks of “internal motivation,” encouraging players to build or evaluate by providing the right setting for their thoughts.
"What new ways can we encourage our players to innovate and come up with their own goals?" Said Larsson. “How can we encourage you to explore more or to tell more stories?”
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In addition to increasing the length of the globe, the “Caves and Cliffs” review redefines how metal, such as steel, copper and gold, will be produced throughout the game. Spelunkers who like to dig in the "Minecraft" caves will now find large, multi-storey caves with water, dangling vines and dripping stalactites, depending on where they are on the map. Also, Larsson said certain biomes will now come together so that a forest or desert can form on the side of a mountain, for example.
Fans are referring to the update, technically listed in version 1.18 of the game, as "Minecraft 2.0." Rob Clark, 35, of Somerset, England, said he was looking forward to playing the update on the same server as his brother and nephew. All three have been playing together for about a year now, since the United Kingdom entered for the second time due to the coronavirus epidemic.
"She's very young," said Clark, referring to her nine-year-old nephew. “He is very happy to mix with the valleys and dig small holes in the rock. ... But, you know, I spend time with my nephew who lives four hours away. We would not have a good family time. "
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Dash Marley, a 27-year-old resident of Maine, has already tried the latest release to review the updated local generation. Marley, who has played "Minecraft" off-and-on with friends for more than a decade now, said it was the biggest, most "sweeping" change Minecraft ever made in the game world. (Yes, there is also underground.)
"I flew over the dark forest and it turned into a series of mixed caves," Marley said. "In this new world, I can't walk for more than 10 minutes before I see a place that makes me want to invest hours and hours and turn the place into a new foundation."
Larsson said that, with all the reviews, the Mojang Studios team is trying to offer something new to all sorts of fans - like a builder, an explorer or a survivor. At the 10th annual "Minecraft" Live Festival in October, Mojang announced next year's release, "The Wilds," which will unveil the many biomes, animals and blocks in the game, including the lost underground city called "Deep Dark."
But, Larsson said they do not want to introduce too many cities and buildings. Doing so will eliminate what players can create on their own. Larsson wants to make sure the world stays out of control for the player to explore.
“We have to motivate but we should never decide. It is up to the players to make their own goals, ”said Larsson. "When you come up with goals for yourself, it's very encouraging."
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