Minecraft’ Snapshot 17w15a Introduces Colored Beds and Several Bug Fixes

Snapshot 17w15a has been released for “Minecraft,” and this latest update preview brings some new features as well as several bug fixes that players have been looking for.

image: http://d.christianpost.com/full/103559/590-218/minecraft.png

image: http://d.christianpost.com/full/103559/590-218/minecraft.png

Facebook courtesy of MinecraftA new Snapshot was released just recently for ‘Minecraft’

Before diving into what Snapshot 17w15a contains, players should know more about how to activate it for the game. They can do this by first navigating over to the Launch Options tab and then checking off the box that says “Enable Snapshots.” They should then save the change they just made.

Players who will be activating the newest Snapshot or any Snapshot for that matter are encouraged to back up their files first to avoid any issues that may stem from their worlds possibly being corrupted.

Once players have taken care of all that, they can go ahead and see what is inside the latest Snapshot.

According to the changelog posted over on the game’s official website, players now have access to colored beds, and these are ones they can make either by using dye on a white bed or by crafting one while using some colored wool.

“Minecraft” players can now also toggle the narrator between options such as off, chat only, system messages only, and chat & system. A new toast notification has also been added via Snapshot 17w15a for toggling the narrator.

Advancements should now also come with descriptions while some of the titles in the game have been changed as well.

Stairs have also been improved, and they are now designed to function better with things such as fences, glass panes and walls.

As for the bug fixes, one in particular addressed by Snapshot 17w15a ensures that the statistics page should now work properly.

Improvements for many of the tamed animals have also been applied, and several fixes for the game’s parrots have been added.

More news about “Minecraft” should be made available in the near future.

Minecraft’ Snapshot 17w15a Introduces Colored Beds and Several Bug Fixes

Santa Monica company bringing Minecraft tournaments to Valley

Super League Gaming, a Santa Monica, California-based gaming company, partnered with Harkins Theatres to host tournaments for kids and teens in one of its Gilbert locations.

“We’ve looked at Phoenix and long believed it was a great city due to its family-friendly focus — we partnered with Harkins, and they helped us decide that Gilbert’s audience in particular would be a great place for this offering,” said Ann Hand, CEO of Super League Gaming.

Competitors vie for a spot on the city teams, which include the Phoenix Blaze team, to compete nationally. Events kicked off in March and continue to run through May.

“Super League is bringing an experience that kids already love — playing Minecraft — to a local level,” said Hand. “With Super League, gamers have the opportunity to play face-to-face with their local team, building, creating and battling against other local communities which fosters a stronger sense of teamwork and city pride.”

Hand said the demographics for the tournaments historically has been between the ages of 9 and 13, while the gender skews male.

A Harkins representative for Scottsdale-based Harkins Theatres, said the partnership is part of the company’s venture into unique viewing experiences.

“Whether it’s broadcasting the NCAA Finals, showing the season premiere of BBC’s hit show Sherlock or allowing gamers to play their favorite games on the big screen, Harkins is always looking for new opportunities to create memorable experiences for guests,” said the Harkins spokesperson. “The in-theater Minecraft tournament is just one more opportunity to use the state-of- the-art technology and larger-than-life screens to bring fans together to share in an experience unlike anything available at home.”

The theater chain also has endeavored into eSports by broadcasting video game League of Legends national and global tournaments at various Valley locations. The Harkins representative said the company is in the process of planning for more eSports broadcasting.

Santa Monica company bringing Minecraft tournaments to Valley

Stamford students attend Minecraft camp

Children as young as 5 years old spent part of spring break working on their engineering skills.

The city’s Recreation Department held a variety of camps, several of which involved engineering and technology, across Stamford schools this week.

They included a Minecraft engineering camp for 5- and 6-year-olds and a Minecraft master camp for ages 7 through 12. Both were held at Newfield Elementary School and were run by Play-Well TEKnologies, which uses LEGO to teach engineering to children.

Stamford students attend Minecraft camp

We Shall Get Another Look at Minecraft: Switch Edition on April 18

We finally found out that Minecraft is coming to the Nintendo Switch during the Nintendo Direct which took place earlier this week. We received a glimpse of the game and we will be getting more footage come on Tuesday, April 18th. Minecraft: Nintendo Switch Edition launches on Nintendo eShop on May 11th and in stores at a later date.

We Shall Get Another Look at Minecraft: Switch Edition on April 18

Bringing Minecraft into the classroom

PETOSKEY — It was a zoo in Nikky Willison’s third-grade classroom on Wednesday morning.

In fact, there were about a dozen zoos in the process of construction as students worked in pairs to create the ideal habitats for a wide array of animals through the popular video game Minecraft.

Willison said they first began using Minecraft in the classroom at Central Elementary School at the start of the school year through a free trial offer. They purchased the program after the free trial ended with grant funds designated for STEAM resources.

In the latest project, students have been studying how to calculate area and perimeter. The math lesson merged with a science lesson on animals and habitats and students will use all of their research to build their own zoos in the game.

“We’ve been working on area and perimeter and so this ties in with their Common Core standards,” Willison said. “They’re working with a partner, so learning how to collaborate, and then they’re going to design their own zoo.”

Depending on which animals they chose to populate their zoos, the students have to calculate how large to build the habitats based on the animal’s needs. Before they can begin building in the game, Willison said the students map out the zoo by making a blueprint on graph paper.

“They’ve designed the blueprint of their zoo on there and when they have that done, then they’re building it in Minecraft,” she said. “They’re building it together.”

Because of the collaborative nature of the project, Willison said students are learning to recognize that there are real people behind the avatars in the game.

“A lot of times, if they’re playing games, they don’t actually see the person and now their friend is right with them,” she said. “So we’ve had kids where they knocked over a building and their friend has gotten upset and they’ve actually seen them get upset. That’s been a good lesson for the kids to learn.”

One of the students, Alex Cannon, said he has animals such as red pandas, gorillas and iguanas in his zoo and that his favorite part of the project is “probably building the cages with the animals.”

Emma Mitas added that “it’s really fun” using Minecraft in the classroom.

“You have to do math to get their habitats done,” she said.

Because the program is fairly new to the classroom, Willison said she is still learning of new ways to incorporate the game into her lessons.

“You can also combine social studies with it. You can build longhouses and simulate trading posts in it,” she said. “(The students) love Minecraft. They write in their journals, they give me ideas of ways we can use it in school, which is great. They’re motivated to learn.”

In fact, Willison said the students are learning above grade level skills as they build their zoos.

“It’s fun to see them stretch their brains and learn a little bit more,” she said. “I’m so happy we got an opportunity to try it because it’s really great for these guys. They really love it. I just love how engaged they are.”

Bringing Minecraft into the classroom

Minecraft for Windows 10 and Mobile Is Finally Getting a Creator Marketplace

At some point in May, Minecraft will experience a kind of coda to Microsoft and Mojang’s grand synchronization of the original Java version and its newer, future-proofed Windows 10 and smartphone/tablet ones. It’s called the Discovery Update, and it will add the last few absent components — llamas, shulkers, spooky woodland mansions, ill-natured villagers and spectral vexes — to a game that has perhaps received more post-purchase content, gratis, than any other.

And then it will go a step further, adding features the Java version will never see. Like a new, curated, in-app marketplace for handpicked creators to offer things like skin packs, retextured overlays and entire worlds. Those creators, dubbed “Pioneer Partners” and limited to just nine at the outset, will be allowed to sell their wares alongside Microsoft and Mojang’s own. To buy them, players (with Xbox Live Silver or Gold accounts) will have to spend a new in-game currency dubbed “Minecraft Coins,” reserved in exchange for real world money ($1.99 for 300, $4.99 for 840 or $9.99 for 1,720) and intended to be the de facto means of buying all things Minecraft going forward.

Microsoft 

“We have nine creators today, but we’ll be growing that number at a measured pace,” John Thornton, Executive Producer of Minecraft Realms, says when asked how fast Microsoft hopes to scale things up. “We want to have high quality content, we want to be able to support each creator building what they want to build. To do that we need to pace ourselves and grow our team at the same time that we’re growing the marketplace. Every creator needs somebody to talk to, like an account rep, somebody to review content, so there’s a bunch of mechanics.” The plan right now, he says, is to add partners at a pace of roughly two to five a month.

One of those launch partners, an outfit calling itself Blockworks, is known for seemingly impossible feats. Like creating a scientific facility staged in a martian landscape composed of some 2 million blocks. The twist? It took five builders just two days to pull off. Or an ancient civilization at the bottom of the ocean composed of 33 million blocks that took 15 builders less than a month to complete. “Until now, all of our content’s been pretty much exclusively on Java,” says James Delaney, Blockworks’ founding and managing director. “So this is a chance to connect with all the other Minecraft platforms excluding Java and console. That’s a been a community that’s struggled to access quality content up to now.”

Each creator can only furnish so much content per month, explains Thornton, which makes for a natural bottleneck that should keep the curation process expedient. The content can also now be folded into Minecraft‘s worlds without requiring a full game update. The store itself will have its own approval guidelines, and includes a conventional 30% sales cut back to the app platform, after which the company says it will “seek to give the majority of the remainder to the creator.” What sort of content will Microsoft approve? “Our goal is to make content that’s appropriate for our audience,” says Thornton. “We’re not necessarily critiquing the art style or choice of gameplay. That’s up to the creator. But what we will do is make sure it fits with our brand and within the marketplace itself.”

Microsoft 

Could the store wind up catering to mass market brands? Is this what went around circa Mojang’s banning of advertising agencies and corporations using Minecraft as a promotional tool last year finally coming around, only with Microsoft at the wheel? Never say never, but Thornton stresses that the company’s plan at this point is to foster a community-driven marketplace. “The goal isn’t to call up Coca-Cola tomorrow and say ‘Come in and party with us’,” he says. “We want our community to come into the marketplace. That’s really our focus.”

And if you’re an original Java version player feeling threatened by any of this, don’t be, says Thornton. “We’re not changing the existing community at all. If you want to still make content for free, and feel the best way to get known is to go out there and just make stuff, that’s still encouraged,” he says. “We’re not changing anything there. Players and creators are still welcome to make free content and put it on social media sites to try to make a name for themselves.”

Microsoft 

Regardless, some of this is surely down to a company that paid $2.5 billion for the industry’s all-time second bestselling game a few years ago forging new, fire-walled profit channels for an experience that has to date flourished off unfettered user mods. But curation also entails safeguarding, and to that end, Microsoft says this is partly about creating a place for players to find content dependably free of viruses or malware. It’s also working on a way to enable a buy-once, play-anywhere framework through its Xbox Live service, though since this involves multi-platform coordination, all it’s committing to is to say more about how or when this might happen later this spring.

Minecraft for Windows 10 and Mobile Is Finally Getting a Creator Marketplace

Startups: How Roblox Plans to Copy Microsoft’s Minecraft

This week, Roblox Corporation, the San Mateo, California-based developer of the popular online social gaming platform for kids known as Roblox, announced the closure of its first private equity offering in more than five years.

The funding round, which raised $92 million for the company, was primarily backed by Meritech Capital Partners, a venture capital firm that was an early investor in many tech giants such as Snapchat, Facebook and Index Ventures. In addition to expanding the company’s mobile strategy, the funds raised will also be used to repurchase shares from those employees who wish to cash out of some of their equity. (For related reading, see: Is Microsoft Stock a Bargain at Tech-Bubble Highs?)

Minecraft Rival

The game Roblox allows its players to create their own virtual worlds, and is often described as being very similar to Microsoft’s Minecraft video game. Microsoft acquired Minecraft for $2.4 billion in 2014. The funds raised from the recent funding round could help to better position Roblox to compete with Minecraft. The main ages for the users of both gaming platforms ranges from 6 years to 16 years.

According to the company’s corporate website, Roblox’s platform currently sees 48 million monthly users while a March 2017 article in Bloomberg reports that Minecraft has a total of 55 million active users. (For more, see also: Can LinkedIn Become Microsoft’s Instagram?)

The Business Model

Although Roblox declined to disclose the valuation at which their recent financing round was offered, an article that was published in Forbes last summer revealed that the company had realized more than $50 million in gross revenues in the year 2015. The company primarily makes its money by selling a virtual currency to its players and also by charging a subscription fee to developers who use the platform to develop games. Roblox also takes a commission from purchases on games that were made by developers. Some of Roblox’s top game creators are reportedly making as much as $50,000 a month.

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Startups: How Roblox Plans to Copy Microsoft’s Minecraft

Is the Latest MINECRAFT POKÉMON the Coolest One Yet?

As has been well-documented, Minecraft is a sort of breeding ground for Pokémon fan recreations. Somebody made a working Game Boy Advance capable of playing Pokémon Fire Red last summer, while another fan created an entirely new 3D Pokémon adventure, all in Minecraft. If you’ve been reading the site for a while, you might also remember the fan who was working on a fully functional recreation of Pokémon Red. He was off to a strong start in 2015, and now, the project is finally finished (via Polygon).

When we last checked in on Mr. Squishy, who went by Magib1 at the time, he had the Pokédex, basic game mechanics, and the world map done. Now, he’s finally finished, and the game is a true port, meaning that he didn’t just make a Game Boy emulator in Minecraft and load the Pokémon Red ROM into it: He recreated the entire game from scratch.

In the above video interview with Polygon, Mr. Squishy explains how that process worked and why it was necessary:

Minecraft has command blocks, which allow you to write code in-game. There’s no easy way to just take the ROM for one of these old games and dump it into Minecraft. To get all of the functionality in the game, you basically need to re-code everything from the ground up inside the game, so that’s what I’ve done here.

Mr. Squishy also documented the process on Reddit and answered some questions there, revealing that so much effort went into this endeavor: He walked over 1,760 in-game miles and used 357,000 command blocks over the 21 months it took to finish the project. Even all of the game’s original glitches have been recreated. Now that’s dedication.

Of course, this Minecraft-based Pokémon game is a totally different beast from the other aforementioned efforts…

The Pokémon Fire Red remake is more graphically intensive since it’s a GBA game, but movement is a bit choppy and it’s still very much a work in progress (although the latest version of the game has made great strides and it looks fairly accurate at this point).

Then there’s Pokémon Cobalt and Amethyst, which is in a completely different league. Instead of recreating an existing game, this one is a completely new adventure in 3D. It copies the original game mechanics, and it’s sort of like a merge of Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Sun and Moon, so it’s very robust. It has an original plot and even a bunch of brand new Pokémon, so the game definitely goes beyond the call of duty.

Each of these fan projects are special in their own way, and a testament to how versatile of a creation environment Minecraft can be to people with good ideas and ambition.

Feel free to download the Pokémon Red remake for yourself and give it a go, right here. Are you going to try this out, or are you going to stick to your emulators, or perhaps an original cartridge? Hit up the comments below and let us know what you think!

Is the Latest MINECRAFT POKÉMON the Coolest One Yet?

Minecraft in urban planning: how digital natives are shaking up governments

When we think of governments and technology, the image that springs to mind is more likely to be clunky computers and red tape than it is nimble innovators.

But things are changing. The geeks in jeans are making their way into government and starting to shake things up.

New ideas are changing the way governments use technology – whether that’s the UK’s intelligence organisation GCHQ finding a secure way to use the instant messenger Slack or senior mandarins trumpeting the possibilities of big data.

Governments are also waking up to the idea that the public are not only users, but also a powerful resource – and that engaging them online is easier than ever before. “People get very excited about using technology to make a real impact in the world,” says Chris Lintott, the co-founder of Zooniverse, a platform that organisations can use to develop their own citizen science projects for everything from analysing planets to spotting penguins.

For one of these projects, Old Weather, Zooniverse is working with the UK Met Office to gather historic weather data from ancient ships’ logs. At the same time, people helping to discover the human stories of life at sea. “Volunteers noticed that one admiral kept turning up on ship after ship after ship,” says Lintott. “It turned out he was the guy responsible for awarding medals!”

The National Archives in the US has similarly been harnessing the power of people’s curiosity by asking them to transcribe and digitise, handwritten documents through its Citizen Archivist project.

“When we started, two of my staff created a little prototype and stuffed it with 2,000 pages for transcription. They just cobbled it together,” says chief information officer Pam Wright.

She expected it to take six months for the public to transcribe the pages – instead, they “just dived right in and transcribed everything within the first two weeks”. There are now more than 275,000 transcriptions in the catalogue – but with 20 million more records ready and waiting, Wright says “there is no concern about running out of material for folks to transcribe”.

Governments don’t generally have the budgets for blockbuster technologies, but, as Wright notes, “fiscal constraint is the mother of innovation”. The other bonus is the community spirit of developers, who will often publish their code openly so others can put it to good use.

This is particularly useful when people with the necessary digital skills enter government. Matti Lindholm, a communications officer in the Finnish environment agency – who also happens to be a web developer – did just that to create a platform to collect data on the country’s lakes.

The idea for the Järviwiki, which asks citizens to log observations about Finland’s tens of thousands of lakes via a wiki service, came to Lindholm one morning on the way into work.

“I had been trying to come up with something to make better use of citizen observations on blue-green algae blooming,” he says. “WikiLeaks was in the news a lot at the time, and in one story it was misspelled ‘WikiLakes’ – suddenly everything seemed very clear.”

Lindholm set up the service by populating open source wiki software with existing lake information. People are now able to add their own observations and comments, and they have recorded almost 110,000 observations – as well as correcting a few errors in government data.

The increase in the number of digital natives in governments not only brings in different skills, it also enthuses the rest of the workforce, and opens their eyes to more unusual ideas.

Take Block by Block, which uses the game Minecraft to help young people show city planners how urban spaces could work better for them.

A decade ago it would have been hard to imagine a UN agency encouraging local governments to use a game to re-design their cities. Now UN-Habitat, which works with governments to promote more sustainable urban environments, is doing just that.

“I remember putting in a lot of work to convince colleagues, who were a little bit hesitant when you said, ‘We’re going to use video games’,” says Pontus Westerberg, programme officer at UN-Habitat. “But the nice thing is it really works, and that’s what convinced people.”

With 35 projects worldwide, in countries as varied as Vietnam, Kenya and Mexico, Westerberg says it is now usually local governments that approach his team.

Of course, there are other ways of allowing citizens to influence what goes on in their cities. Apps like FixMyStreet allow you to report problems in your neighbourhood, while projects such as Madame Mayor, I have an idea in Paris allow citizens to pitch ideas to the government (and in this case help spend €500m).

And, because governments tend to focus on what matters most to people, it’s not surprising that transport is a major area of investment around the world.

About a decade ago, says Stacy Donohue, who works at the philanthropic organisation Omidyar Network, transport was a big deal in the US – now it’s shifted to the developing world. She picks out the South African company WhereIsMyTransport, which brings together all transport data for a city on one platform, to help planning, as an example.

In Singapore, meanwhile – a country with densely populated cities and high volumes of traffic – the government is using tech to do more than manage information. It has created an app, MyResponder, that alerts a network of more than 10,000 medically trained volunteers to anyone who has a heart attack nearby, sometimes getting someone to the scene faster than the ambulance can get through the traffic.

The government is now piloting an expansion of the project by kitting out taxis with defibrillators and giving drivers first aid training, then linking them up to the app.

It’s examples like these, where governments use technology to bring communities together, that demonstrates the benefit of embracing innovation. The people making it happen are not only improving services for citizens – their quirky ideas are breathing new life into archaic systems.

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Minecraft in urban planning: how digital natives are shaking up governments

Minecraft Realms Multiplayer Update Available for Apple TV

Minecraft is still a very popular game played on multiple platforms. However, today we will talk about Minecraft for Apple TV, which is finally receiving Realms Multiplayer that will allow you to purchase servers and play with your friends online.

After installing the latest Minecraft update on your Apple TV, you will notice that the “Realms” feature is activated, which is Minecraft’s subscription-based multiplayer system. We have to mention that this upgraded version also supports “Xbox Live authentication” option, which will allow the players to access their linked character skins and avatars.

After purchasing a “Realms” account, you will receive your own Minecraft server, which is maintained by Microsoft. This means that you will not have to worry about things like hosting or IP addresses, as all of these will be made by the company headquartered in Redmond, Washington.

Keep in mind that you will be able to control who is able to join your private Minecraft Realm in order to make sure that no one is messing up with your world while you are offline. The good thing about “Realms” is that the server is online 24/7, which means that your friends are able to join and keep building and having fun in this game while you are offline.

An official private Minecraft server that allows up to two players in it costs $3.99 per month, while for a ten player Realm you will have to pay $7.99 per month. The bad news is that if you have a friend of yours who already plays Minecraft on Linux, PC or Mac, he will NOT be able to play with you, as these are different platforms.

In other words, there are two separate Realms systems: one for computers and one for mobile handsets that includes iOS, Android and Windows 10 Mobile. We’re not sure if Mojang and Microsoft will decide to connect the two platforms, but that might happen in the future.

Minecraft Realms Multiplayer Update Available for Apple TV

Minecraft Apple TV Edition Comes with Online Gaming Support

Recently, an update was released for the Minecraft Pocket apps, where the Apple TV version of the popular game receives support for Xbox Live and for the Realms gameplay features. For those of you who might not know about it, Realms is the paid online gameplay feature that was released initially back in June. It is available for the Windows 10, iOS and Android versions of the Minecraft Pocket.

More about Realms

Realms is in fact a service that allows an easy set up and lets you invite maximum 10 friends for a private server in the game. As such, you can play together with your friends and family online. Now this service is available for Apple TV too, so players can access their servers on the device too. They are available starting with the price of $3.99 a month for a three-people server and $7.99 a month for 11 people including yourself.

The recent update naturally comes with some new features in stock. Among them we can see a Power Rangers skin pack, more commands which you can use (/stopsound, /playsound, /clear, /difficulty, /me etc), new game rules (drowningdamage, sendcommandfeedback, faildamage, commandblockoutput etc.) and command blocks. Moreover, you will also get minecart with command block and, as we mentioned, Apple TV support for Xbox Live and Realms.

What’s more interesting is that there are some tweaks too. You can see that in the Storage manager the magnifying glass does not appear anymore over the entered text. The jump range of the magma cubes has been fixed to the right value, and the lapis lazuli icon now appears in the enchanting tables. Lastly, the team corrected the accuracy of the fireball shots from ghasts. People are excited that the update comes with some bug fixes too, which makes it even better.

Minecraft Apple TV Edition Comes with Online Gaming Support

Microsoft introduces Minecraft for China with new closed beta

The team over at Mojang has brought us some pretty big news today: on the occasion of a trip to Beijing, China, the Minecraft developer announced the release of Minecraft’s Chinese closed beta. The game was unveiled during a special event held at Beijing’s massive Water Cube, which was lit up Minecraft-style for the occasion.

Mojang has teamed up with Chinese Internet technology NetEase to develop a version of the game which has been specially adapted for Chinese players.

Minecraft has had truly amazing support from Chinese players over the years, even though it’s never been very easy for them to buy the game. So it’s thrilling to be able to officially re-introduce the game to such a passionate group of players, and, with our amazing partners NetEase.”

Through NetEase, Chinese players will be able to test a closed beta of both Minecraft and Minecraft: Pocket Edition. “We’re super-excited to see what Chinese players make in Minecraft, but this is also an amazing opportunity for builders from other parts of the globe to put their creations in front of a new Chinese audience,” added Mojang.

Microsoft introduces Minecraft for China with new closed beta

Minecraft morphed into game to help kids and parents deal with onset of diabetes

Prahlad Wulf’s eyes are locked on his laptop screen and his fingers tap the keyboard in complete absorption, his focus broken only by the time taken to grab a few corn chips to eat.

Six boys sit next to him, each similarly focused.

They are all playing Minecraft, the massively popular game where blocky-pixelated characters explore, build, and live in a limitless blocky-pixelated world.

But unlike the other boys, Prahlad has type 1 diabetes.

He was diagnosed at the age of eight, and spent two weeks in hospital learning how to manage the condition via the rituals of daily injections, blood glucose checks and watching what he eats.

“I was really young then so I didn’t really understand most of it, it was a little bit scary,” Prahlad said.

For his father Josh Wulf, the experience was tough to handle.

“If anything happens to your children it really hits you, you know?” Mr Wulf said.

The experience stuck with Mr Wulf, who now runs programs helping children learn coding through Minecraft.

“I realised we could make a difference for children and families living with type 1 diabetes in terms of learning how to manage their condition in a safe way, and a fun way,” he said.

With a group of volunteers, he has been building a modified version of Minecraft and they have been spending weekends together fine-tuning and testing the game.

GIF: A modified version of Minecraft helps children manage their diabetes

In the modified version of Minecraft, players walk around the world and play through stories, with the added challenge of monitoring their blood glucose and insulin.

“They focus on playing, they focus on the story, they focus on the magic, and they just learn how to manage diabetes in the course of that,” Mr Wulf said.

He hopes the finished game will help children with type 1 diabetes connect online, as well as help their friends without diabetes better understand the condition.

QUT associate professor Michael Dezuanni studies how kids learn playing games and he would like to trial the game with newly diagnosed kids in hospital.

“They would be able to play the game, and it would be able to become one part of their education around type 1 diabetes,” he said.

The project has also attracted international attention.

Mr Wulf said a Danish pharmaceutical company that manufactures insulin approached him after hearing about the project.

“We’re working with their scientists on the modelling of the metabolism in the game, and we’re going to visit them in Denmark in June to talk further about that,” he said.

Prahlad said if the game existed when he was diagnosed, it would have helped.

“It would’ve been easier for me to understand what is, cause it’s in simpler terms instead of all this scientific mumbo jumbo,” he said.

“Someone who newly has type 1 diabetes – it would help them a lot.”

Minecraft morphed into game to help kids and parents deal with onset of diabetes

Minecraft players, beware fake ‘mods’ on Google Play

It could be “game over” for Minecraft fans who downloaded unauthorized mods (modifications) for their Android smartphone or tablet.

Instead of finding new content or tools to tweak the wildly popular Minecraft: Pocket Edition mobile game, more than 80 malicious apps — disguised as Minecraft mods — contained Trojans that bombarded users with advertisements or redirected them to scam websites, says ESET, a Slovakia-based cybersecurity company.

Lukas Stefanko, the malware researcher who discovered the fake mods, says there have been nearly 1 million downloads of the malicious apps from the Google Play store. “Users often fall for phony apps because they’re promising to deliver something new for a famous game like Minecraft, plus many have positive — but fabricated — ratings,” Stefanko says in an interview with USA TODAY.

Once launched, the apps displayed a screen with a download button, which didn’t install a mod but took users to a Web browser with “scareware” messages falsely notifying users of a found virus on their device and promoting them to download a new app.

Other apps displayed numerous advertisements.

ESET says it reported these two groups of apps to Google on March 16 and 21, respectively. If anyone suspects any of these apps are installed, the company offers step-by-step instructions on how to properly remove them at welivesecurity.com.

Along with running a mobile security solution, Stefanko says, ESET suggests Android users download apps only from trustworthy developers or official stores and be cautious when giving app permissions.

Microsoft did not comment on the ESET findings but said in a statement, “Customers should use caution when dealing with publishers who aren’t known or reputable. We recommend downloading games and apps from trusted sources, such as Microsoft and Mojang.”

Google had no comment.

This isn’t the first time unauthorized Minecraft-related malware has been found on Google Play. In May 2015, ESET discovered and reported 30 applications that pretended to be cheats for the popular game, installed by more than 600,000 Android users.

Minecraft was developed and published by Mojang in 2011, originally for personal computers, and agreed to a purchase by Microsoft for roughly $2.5 billion in the fall of 2014.

Minecraft players, beware fake ‘mods’ on Google Play

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

The original Mighty Morphing Power Rangers at that. Retro!

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

Minecraft on consoles is never one to miss out on skin packs for recent pop culture trends. This time, they’ve jumped on board with Mighty Morphing Power Rangers. The original Power Rangers that is!

Minecraft has announced a new skin pack for Console, Pocket, and Windows 10 versions of the game. This skin pack includes all the rangers of course, but it also includes Rita Repulsa, Lord Zed, Goldar, Bulk, Skull, and even Alpha! If that’s not enough, even putties and the Megazord are included.

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

“As a teen I remember getting out of school, grabbing a snack and settling into the cartoon line-up,” explains Mike Fielder, one of the artists who worked on the skin pack. “Part of that routine was watching Power Rangers. When I found out we would be working on a Minecraft version of some of the character line-up I was pretty excited and even more so when I found out Bulk and Skull would be included since they were my favourite characters. I had a blast creating Minecraft versions of these characters. I hope everyone who uses these skins has as much fun playing them as I did creating them.”

These skins are available for free right now on Console, Pocket and Windows 10 versions of the game!

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

Power Rangers Skin Pack Comes to Minecraft

This Minecraft map lets kids rebuild London after the Great Fire of 1666 (and learn about history while they do it)

Children can become heroic architects working to rebuild the remnants of London after the Great Fire of 1666 with the third and final free map in the educational Minecraft series released by the Museum of London.

Great Fire 1666: The Rebuild challenges players to rebuild London after the fire and design their own version of the city. It follows the first and second maps in the series which were released in July and September last year.

Roam the ruined streets of the capital before meeting King Charles II at the Guildhall to hear his plea for a new London. Four architects who submitted rebuilding plans – Christopher Wren (who’s best known for later designing St Paul’s Cathedral), Valentine Knight, John Evelyn and Richard Newcourt – express their ideas for a new London to inspire the player, including wider streets, large open squares, public markets and fountains and charging a levy to use a new canal.

Some of the characters are voiced by well-known YouTubers BigBStaz, NinjaBob and Wizard Keen – with King Charles II played by Stampy’s dad.

The Museum of London mixed its historical expertise and rich resources with less reality-based know-how: digital producer Adam Clarke and Minecraft professionals BlockWorks and Dragnoz.

Adam works globally with institutions, museums and schools using Minecraft and other technologic games to educate and entertain. He plays Wizard Keen in children’s educational Minecraft show – Wonder Quest – alongside fellow YouTuber Stampy.

Dragnoz also worked on production design for Wonder Quest and other game design projects. As a YouTube personality himself, you can check out his education games on his website. The BlockWorks team is made up of 40 international builders, animators and artists – put together to produce Minecraft builds.

Great Fire 1666: The Rebuild is available to download for Minecraft on Mac and Windows here.

The series is part of the Museum of London’s various projects marking the 350th anniversary of the Great Fire of London. Find out more about the interactive exhibitions here.

The first map of the series was based on Wenceslaus Hollar’s map of burnt London from the museum’s collection. The second map puts the user as the hero – saving residents in mini-games, fighting the fire and chatting to famous figures from the time.

This Minecraft map lets kids rebuild London after the Great Fire of 1666 (and learn about history while they do it)

Power Rangers Invade Minecraft In New DLC Pack Out Now

A new Power Rangers skin pack is available for Minecraft right now. The pack comes with skins for all the five main Power Rangers, as well as skins for Rita Repulsa, Bulk, and Skull.

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The Power Rangers Pack is available now for Minecraft’s console, Windows 10, and mobile versions. It’s priced at $3, and is a very small download, coming in at just 10.09 MB.

Here’s what one of the artists who worked on the Power Rangers skin pack had to say, “I had a blast creating Minecraft versions of these characters. I hope everyone who uses these skins has as much fun playing them as I did creating them.”

The Power Rangers skin pack is just the latest for Minecraft. Others already available include those for The Simpsons, Star Wars, and Halo, among many others.

Power Rangers Invade Minecraft In New DLC Pack Out Now

Pick up Minecraft: Xbox One Favorites Pack and get the Battle Map Pack pass free

Microsoft has outed a temporary bundle deal that should make the prospect of picking up Minecraft on Xbox One a little more tempting. Now, when you pick up the Minecraft: Xbox One Edition Favorites Pack, you can snag the Battle Map Pack Season Pass for free.

Pick up Minecraft: Xbox One Favorites Pack and get the Battle Map Pack pass free

In all, this bundle will save you a modest $10, or the price of the Battle Map Pack Season Pass. You’ll still have to shell out $30 to pick up the Favorites Pack, itself. For its part, the Favorites Pack includes the following:

  • Battle & Beasts Skin Pack
  • Battle & Beasts 2 Skin Pack
  • Natural Texture Pack
  • City Texture Pack
  • Fantasy Texture Pack
  • Festive Mash-up
  • Halo Mash-up

The free Battle Map Pack Season Pass will give you access to a total of four map packs that you can use with the Battle mini game. Interested? This deal is up for grabs through April 15 at the Microsoft Store, along with retailers like Gamestop and Walmart.

Pick up Minecraft: Xbox One Favorites Pack and get the Battle Map Pack pass free

Minecraft unveils Discovery Update for Windows 10 and Pocket Edition

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Game developer Mojang unveiled the next update for Minecraft‘s Windows 10 and Pocket Edition: the Discovery Update. The update now bumps the game to version 1.1 and focuses heavily on exploration.

In a blog post, Mojang’s Marsh Davies explained:

It’s not called The Discovery Update for no reason: there are many mysterious and wondrous things to uncover. Barter with a cartographer for a treasure map, sling your supplies into a llama’s pack (or into a shulker box) and embark on an epic quest to locate the dank and dangerous forest mansion! Does your route take you across an impassable river? The Enchantment of Frostwalking will solve that problem! Meanwhile, the Enchantment of Mending will keep your swordblade sharp no matter how many mobs you slay along the way. Defeat the sinister illagers who lurk within the mansion and make off with their precious loot – the Totem of Undying – and cheat death as you throw yourself into further peril!

The update also includes the ability to dye your bed a new color or build with new terracotta and concrete blocks. Players can also alter the movement properties of mobs. Mojang also promised to deliver more features for the Discovery Update.

Update 1.1 for Windows 10 and PE versions of Minecraft does not heavily differ from the Exploration Update that launched nearly five months ago.

Minecraft unveils Discovery Update for Windows 10 and Pocket Edition

Gaming-enabled education: Minecraft for young minds

Tech literacy is essential in the contemporary workplace. The ability to navigate basic software, operating systems, the Internet, and mobile devices is a mandatory skill in virtually any industry.

It is a workplace our grandparents would not recognise, and if you’re over 30 very little of your school career would have prepared you for it.

Not so for current school students. They have never known a world without mobile phones, even if they don’t yet have their own. We’ve all heard anecdotes about children trying to activate a TV by touching the screen, or seen toddlers trying to pinch and zoom their way through print magazines like they would on a tablet.

These children will soon enter a school environment even more geared for tech literacy, aimed at preparing them for a workplace we cannot imagine, and jobs that haven’t yet been invented.

Computer-assisted teaching is well established, and gaming-led learning is part of it. Microsoft and Minecraft are tapping into it with the recent release (and local launch) of Minecraft: Education Edition. This version of the popular game gives teachers and schools a more controlled and secure virtual environment in which to let their charges loose.

Since the global launch last year, more than 75,000 students around the world have engaged with Minecraft: Education Edition.

Inside the game, players build and create elements of their world such as buildings, farms, structures and complex systems that can — in a lesson environment — be used to represent other things, such as the excretory system for a biology class. There’s an endless supply of building materials and chances to “do over”, promoting a level of comfort around trying, failing and trying again that is not always present in classrooms with the limitations of their physical resources. This also promotes creativity and collaboration.

But do we really want even more screen time and children playing computer games in class? It’s a matter of teacher management, says Stephen Reid, a Scottish educator and founder of ImmersiveMinds, as well as an ambassador for Minecraft: Education Edition. He attended the local launch at Brescia House School in Johannesburg this month.

He lays this principle out with examples from his own experience. He recently taught a module on Egyptian history. The class read textbooks, researched an essay and mapped a pyramid on graph paper throughout the week, before getting limited class time in Minecraft at the end of the week to try their hand at virtually building these structures. Another group used the technology to recreate a historical building in a Minecraft world — learning about modelling, research, technical drawing and design, before creating their digital projects. Then they bed these lessons down in a tech environment, along with learning how to manoeuvre and manipulate in this virtual setting.

Reid believes this is how students learn from observation and trial-and-error.

This is how to ensure that children have a job in the future, in the face of increasing automation, Reid argues in an opinion piece: “It is our duty as educators to rise to these demands and assist our learners in developing the kinds of skills needed to play their own part in this digital evolution. Today’s learners have to master the use of technology and acquire 21st-century learning skillsets such as critical thinking, creative problem solving, collaboration and communication within groups of people from diverse countries and cultures.”

Several primary school students from Brescia House School were present at the launch, and keen to show off their newfound skills. The littlest girls played on tablets throughout the session, then showed the collection of teachers and journalists the projects they had created, including planning and building little homes for their online avatars. The older children then led the group through an exercise in a Minecraft world – their fingers flying over the keyboards (making this particular journalist feel very slow).

Brescia House’s endeavours in Minecraft began after a teacher saw a presentation by Reid at an education conference and petitioned to include this in her classes. But this is – for now – certainly not within reach for all SA schools, as licensing fees and hardware requirements apply.

Gaming-enabled education: Minecraft for young minds