There’s A ‘Minecraft’ Version Of Disney World, And It Might Be Better Than The Real Thing

There’s A ‘Minecraft’ Version Of Disney World, And It Might Be Better Than The Real Thing

One uneventful Friday night, I decided to visit Disney World. I’d been once before, packing all four parks into five days. It was intense, and I didn’t get to go on all the rides.

This time I wanted to take it easy. So I wandered around the Germany Pavilion at Epcot. I rode on Pirates of the Caribbean at Magic Kingdom. Twice, actually. I ate some snacks so I wouldn’t die.

Oh, and I did all of that from my couch in “Minecraft.”

Someone built a 1:1 scale of Disney World in “Minecraft,” which is the game that Microsoft recently paid more than $2 billion to own.

“Minecraft” is what’s called an open-world sandbox game, where players can build amazing creations, walk endlessly, or even play against each other online.

The multiplayer functionality of “Minecraft” is where people from all over can participate and play with each other in the same virtual world. Some people even host their own servers. There are hundreds if not thousands of gorgeous creations in the game, ranging from entire cities to replicas of real-life landmarks.

Once Upon A Dream

And that’s where Disney World comes in, or as it’s called in “Minecraft,” the MCMagic server.

The brains behind the magic is David Wasman, who goes by the name TheRealDuckie in the game.

David Wasman

He started out building the castle with a couple friends. He then saw on the “Minecraft” subreddit that someone else had built the front train station.

“I put two and two together, and figured I could put each one on opposite ends of Main Street, and then it just blew up from there,” Wasman tells Business Insider.

He then got to thinking that there are thousands of people who would never have a chance to make it to Disney in their lives. So he started a free server running out of his bedroom to give people an opportunity to visit the park.

“The server could only handle around 20 people at the time,” he laughs.

Through word of mouth, other builders from around the world pitched in to help him create more of the park, brick by brick. The number of people willing to help out grew, and three years later, the entirety of Disney World was online and accepting hundreds of visitors a day.

“I knew I had something,” he says. “I knew that being able to take from that magic that Disney already created, I can’t take any credit for that. But I can at least continue it in some way. It’s an homage, really.”

Building a team to help create stuff for a “Minecraft” server is a well-known part of the “Minecraft” world. Ever since Mojang (the maker of “Minecraft”) allowed people to host games on their own servers, there have been teams of people offering their building expertise to help make each server unique.

One of those teams, called ChiseledBrick, was started by a 13-year-old. People can spend anywhere from $50 all the way up to $200 per build, depending on various factors, such as the size of the build and the level of detail involved.

“It’s usually a form of investment. A server usually wants to have a good spawn area because it is the first impression of the server,” ChiseledBrick founder Justin Wang says.

Spawning is where a player is placed in the game world once they sign on. Or where they are “reborn” after they die.

In MCMagic, there’s no dying. It’s strictly for wandering around and checking out the parks. The spawn area looks like the front entrance to Disney World, the ticketing and transportation center. You can read about different aspects of the park, and learn how to do things and which commands to type in.

The best part is that you don’t actually have to walk anywhere. For example, you can just type in that you want to go to the Magic Kingdom, and you’re magically transported to Main Street.

Magic Everywhere

MCMagic is completely nonprofit. Any money that they make from donations goes right back into supporting the servers.

“I’ve paid, for the history of the servers, about 90% of the costs out of pocket,” Wasman says. “I’ve spent well over $16,000.”

Magic Kingdom Orlando, FloridaCourtesy of TripAdvisorThe real Cinderella’s castle in the real Magic Kingdom.

There are hundreds of “cast members,” too, who help guests find things and make sure that everything is running smoothly. They also ensure that the space remains family friendly. There are constant reminders in the chat area on the left that no foul language will be tolerated.

“We are very big on the safety of our guests,” Denise Neill, one of MCMagic’s moderators, tells Business Insider. “We have a very young user base. We don’t allow any profanity, outside links, or any advertising on the server. Our goal is to make sure that when you come here, you know that your 7-year-old is not being approached by anyone who can get them into trouble.”

And even those cast members run the place on a volunteer basis. People who hang out on the server often enough and want to help out even further, whether by acting as a tour guide or a moderator, have to submit an application.

Neill stumbled on this server before taking a trip to Disney World with her husband, and just fell in love with it, she says. She’s been helping out with the server on and off for about three years, all as a volunteer.

“It’s just so much fun,” she says. “I’ve learned something new every day, and I’ve built really good relationships with people I’ve known for three years here.”

She said it’s not uncommon for people who meet on the MCMagic server to hang out in real life, and even meet up in the real Disney World.

Do You Want To Build A Theme Park?

In order to get Disney World looking like the real thing, the team solicits help from Disney fans.

They ask people who are going there to take detailed pictures, they use aerial images from Google, and they’ve even found the blueprints to some of the rides in order to build them to scale.

The amount of detail is insane. You can download what are called “resource packs,” that allow you to experience the parks as intended. And that even includes the music. And the shows, such as “Fantasmic.”

And people love it. “At this time, we’ve had around a quarter of a million guests on our server,” Neill says. “I remember when we had a party for our 5,000th guest. We get a new player every few minutes.”

But thanks to the quick way of getting across the parks, there aren’t any crowds to deal with.

Sorcerer's hat Minecraft

ScreenshotThe sorcerer’s hat in ‘Minecraft.’

To Infinity And Beyond

There aren’t any plans to expand beyond Disney World. They’ll never build the Disneyland in California, or any of the other parks around the world.

But that doesn’t mean the work is over with the parks. Cast members in MCMagic are constantly building new things, ranging from changing up the different seasonal decorations, to huge projects like new rides or attractions.

For example, it was just announced that they’re removing the sorcerer’s hat from Disney’s Hollywood Studios. So it’s only a matter of time before they remove it from MCMagic.

“They will never be done,” Neill says. “This is a work in progress forever. You have to remember that Disney changes every six months. That means something new is coming.”

Minecraft Book Intricately Catalogs Every Block

Minecraft Book Intricately Catalogs Every Block

Blockopedia is a new book published by Egmont that details every block in Minecraft. While players will enjoy the extra information, onlookers are offered a window into how Minecraft provides a creative canvass for block based constructions.

Minecraft blocks are the essential elements that not only make up the world, but that players use to make their creations. Each block has different qualities and inter-dependencies that require a detailed understanding to make the most of them. Even young players soon learn how this all works and can identify the numerous types of blocks they may need.

The book, itself shaped like a block, groups things into different categories: naturally generated blocks, ores and minerals, plants, liquids and gasses, player created, utility and mechanism. Each of the blocks is measured for blast resistance, light-emitting qualities, transparency, physics and flammability.

These details will make more sense to those who have played the game, but even for outsiders it’s fascinating to see just how much is going on beneath the surface of Minecraft. Although the game looks simple and visually retro, this block ecosystem is as complex as any modern video-game.

 

Minecraft_Book
Blockopedia

As with any “fan service” publication though there is an element of cashing-in on the popularity of a particular product or brand. Certainly, Minecraft represents a huge potential audience, and with the book releasing on December 4th is likely to sell out before Christmas.

However, Blockopedia has more content than might be expected here. This, along with the top class presentation, should ensure it is both useful and interesting once the initial novelty has worn off.

Another potential downside with a printed book like this is that it can go out of date quite quickly. Here though there is enough solid basic information that the book will continue to be useful even when it is no longer comprehensive.

Written by Alex Wiltshire, former editor of Edge magazine, the book expands on the basic properties of each block to offer advice and suggestions around their function and use in the game. The extends to how the blocks can be used in crafting to make a variety of useful secondary building materials.

Minecraft_Book_2

Minecraft Book

Perhaps the only real omision in the book is an alphabetical index to look up blocks. Without this readers have to flick through pages or leaf through the table of contents to find particular block’s details.

The book follows the other Minecraft themed publications from Egmont, Minecraft Construction handbook, Minecraft Combat handbook, Minecraft annual and the Minecraft Beginner’s handbook. These each offer more instructional information about the game and are complemented by the Blockopedia information.

Read Original Article:

What Minecraft is teaching your kids about money | Reuters

What Minecraft is teaching your kids about money | Reuters

What Minecraft is teaching us about money“Kids are learning about money on a lot of different levels in Minecraft,” says Joel Levin, co-founder of Manhattan-based TeacherGaming, a firm that works with educators to use video games as teaching tools.

“There are basic currencies, like emeralds that you dig up and can trade with villagers,” Levin explains. “There are exchange rates, because certain items are worth more than others. Then players have to think about whether to spend money right away, or save it and get something more rewarding later on. These are analogous to the financial decisions people are making in the real world all the time.”

And that is just if you are playing the game on your own. If you are online with multiple players, the financial issues become much more complex.

“At that point, players are setting up actual economies,” Levin says. “On a particular server, they may decide that diamonds are the currency of choice. Or some kids start playing the role of a bank, offering loans and charging interest.”

Levin is aware of instances where teachers introduce a rare item into the game that kids can’t obtain on their own, and then watch them react to the scarcity. “It’s supply and demand in action,” he says.

HOW TO START FROM NOTHING

Of course, most parents only experience Minecraft by peering over their kids’ shoulders and trying to figure out what the hell is going on.

So in case you were wondering, here are a few of Minecraft’s key financial lessons:

When starting out in the world of Minecraft, “nobody tells you anything, no instructions,” says 19-year-old Harvey Mulvihill, son of Hank, who plays along with his two brothers. “You are a stranger in a strange land, and you have to figure out how to gain resources.”

Indeed, Minecraft is a so-called “sandbox” game, in which players roam a virtual world with very few limitations. In that way, it is a riff on the traditional American archetype of the Horatio Alger story – starting from nothing and somehow making a huge success of yourself.

Players have to gain skills and then leverage those skills to develop a better world for themselves.

HOW TO PROTECT WHAT YOU HAVE

As in life, very bad things happen all the time in Minecraft – death, robbery, physical attacks and disasters of all stripes. As a result, players have to protect themselves against a number of terrible futures.

For example: travel light. “It is never a good idea to carry your valuables on your person,” advises 17-year-old Patrick Mulvihill. “Once you die your things are dropped on the spot of death. Valuables should be kept in chests in safe, well-lit places.”

But it is not just death players have to insure themselves against. That is because some people in this virtual world – known as “griefers,” according to Patrick – go online solely to steal and break other people’s things.

HOW TO MAKE THE RIGHT CONNECTIONS

Life is all about who you know, and Minecraft is no different. Connecting with the right people can make your virtual life a whole lot easier.

“If I was starting from scratch and didn’t know any coding, I could be digging for emeralds forever,” says Dan Short, associate professor of environmental science at Robert Morris University in Pittsburgh, who has written an academic paper on Minecraft.

“But if you are on a server with other kids, the server owner can basically give you as many emeralds as you need. They’re like little monarchs.”

The moral of the story? Your network counts, and you should develop it as much as possible.

HOW TO MONETIZE YOUR SKILLS

Once you become talented at something, you could find yourself in serious demand. Fifteen-year-old Sean Mulvihill plays with his buddies Jackson, Oscar and Wyatt. “Jackson is known for being the best builder, and others pay him to build them a house,” Sean says.

Meanwhile, Sean is seen as “by far, the best farmer,” he notes modestly. As a result, other players come to him with business propositions, like supplying him with seed, equipment and gold in order to tend their farms and divvy up the profits.

This principle of monetizing your Minecraft skills applies in the real world, too, notes Short. Some have become so talented at the game and charismatic with their audiences – with handles like TheBajanCanadian, Sky Does Minecraft and Lewis & Simon – that they run their own insanely popular channels on Google Inc’s YouTube.

“They get followers on YouTube, they host games and then kids sometimes pay a premium for the chance to play with them and be in their videos,” Short says. “They must be making serious bank. That might be the biggest financial lesson of all.”

(Editing by Lauren Young, Beth Pinsker and G Crosse)

via What Minecraft is teaching your kids about money | Reuters.

Readers in Canada, I need your help|Flynn’s Log 1, price problem

Readers in Canada, I need your help|Flynn’s Log 1, price problem

Oh no! Flynn’s Log 1: Rescue Island is not Free on Amazon.ca in Canada!

I need your help to fix this.

If you try to download Flynn’s Log 1 and the price is not free, it means Amazon has decided to not match the promotion price available on other e-reader devices.

Amazon will change the price to free, but I need some help.

First, on the Amazon page for Canada, scroll down to find and click the link that says tell us about a lower price.

Next, paste some simple info into the Amazon window. It looks like this.

Screen Shot 2014-06-21 at 3.24.20 PM

Copy and paste this URL to the Online store:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/minecraft-adventures-flynns/id885613859?mt=11

Enter the following.

Price: $0

Shipping: $0

Soon (based on Amazon’s time) the price for my book in Canada will be free (again).

In the meantime, you can download Flynn’s Log 1: Rescue Island for Kindle directly from me, free.

Thank you and sorry for this silly problem.

-Stone Marshall

Microsoft Talks Minecraft Buyout, Possibility of Minecraft 2 – GameSpot

Microsoft Talks Minecraft Buyout, Possibility of Minecraft 2 – GameSpot

One of the first things Microsoft could do with the Minecraft franchise to help improve the overall experience is to “unify” the various versions of the game, using Xbox Live.

“I think what we’ve learned through Xbox Live is something that we can help in unifying a little bit of what happens with Minecraft today,” he said. “If I’m on PC I get access to the mod servers; if I’m on console or the mobile editions, I don’t. We’re looking at how do we bring that whole system together a little more. Because there are other games out there that let me move from screen to screen fairly seamlessly.”

Microsoft has pledged to not remove the existing versions of Minecraft for competing platforms such as PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, and PlayStation Vita. However, it remains to be seen if Spencer’s ambition to unify game experiences through Xbox Live would apply to those versions of the game.

via Microsoft Talks Minecraft Buyout, Possibility of Minecraft 2 – GameSpot.

Giveaway-Free Minecraft Book – Stone Marshall-Author

Giveaway-Free Minecraft Book – Stone Marshall-Author

October 2014 Giveaway-Free Minecraft Paperback Book

Signed by Stone Marshall

As a thank you to true fans I’m giving away one Free copy of my Minecraft Adventure book, Flynn’s Log 1: Rescue Island.

The winner will be chosen at random on November 1, 2014. If you win, I’ll email you to get your mailing address.

Many fans ask what a paperback is. Paperbacks are real books, you know like a book made of paper pages and a normal cover.

Good Luck!

Enter to win a Free Minecraft Book

via Giveaway-Free Minecraft Book – Stone Marshall-Author.