Minecraft Introduces the New Order of the Stone in Latest Update

Minecraft Introduces the New Order of the Stone in Latest Update

Minecraft fans all over the world were elated to hear that the latest update scheduled for March 29 will not be the last chapter in the widely successful Minecraft game series. Telltale Games has recently announced that it will be adding three more episodes to its Minecraft: Story Mode series to the delight of fans of the game. The update that is being released on March 29 is now being speculated that it will act as a bridge to tie the remaining story together. While the three new episodes do not have release dates yet, players who wish to purchase episodes 6, 7 and 8 will have to have purchased at least the first episode in the series that came out in October 2015 called “The Order of the Stone”.

Minecraft’s fifth installment, “Order Up!” will see the protagonist, Jesse and his group to an abandoned temple where, following an ambush by the former Ocelot Aiden and his crew, the team will enter an entirely new world called Sky City. The ruler of Sky City finds out that the new Order of the Stone are up to no good, and the catalyst to bridge the next three episodes will be set forth in the game.

According to the Telltale Games blog, the upcoming three episodes will continue the adventures of the New Order of the Stone and will see Jesse and his team in new worlds that have never been experienced before, sure to thrill fans of the game series.

The fifth installment will also see a new character added to the team, voiced by Melissa Hutchinson, who is known as Clementine in Telltale Games Walking Dead game adaptation. While the three additional episodes do not have release dates yet, the update on March 29 will hold fans over until the new dates for release are announced.

Minecraft Introduces the New Order of the Stone in Latest Update

Minecraft Story Mode Episode 5 to Release on Mar. 29, Episodes 6, 7, 8 Coming Soon

Minecraft Story Mode Episode 5 to Release on Mar. 29, Episodes 6, 7, 8 Coming Soon

Soon “Minecraft Story Mode” episode 5 will arrive on several gaming platforms such as Xbox One, Xbox 360, PS4, PS3, Mac, and PC. Moreover, the game is also expected to be launched on the mobile platform, with both iOS and Android devices.

On the Swedish video game’s official website, Owen Hill of Mojang, who is the developer of the game said that episode 5 will be released for download on March 29, and gamers can experience a unique land called Sky City. Jessy would be exploring this new location along with his friends, and the creator has described it as “Intriguing” and “awe-inspiring.”

“Episode 5 will not be the last you see of Jessie and the gang. We can now confirm that three extra episodes will arrive some time in 2016,” Hill wrote on his blog.

The company has revelead much about the new episode called as “Order Up” as the developer of the game want the gamers to play and discover the title all by themselves. However, reports have suggested that “Lord of the Rings” star Sean Astin will give his voice for the game.

The company has launched the “Minecraft Story Mode” in October 2015, and it the roots to the sandbox video game “Minecraft”.  The game has features of episodic adventures with a point-and-click story gameplay. Telltale Games and Mojang AB have collaborated to create the entire game.

Currently, “Minecraft Story Mode” has episodes such as 1 “The Order of the Stone”, “Assembly Required” for episode 2,  “The Last Place You Took” for episode 3 and “A Block and a Hard Place,” for episode 4. Previously, the company intended to include the episode 5, however, latest news have claims otherwise.

Engadget notes that the company will also release three more seasons soon, and it will contain unique content which has not been introduced in the current Season Pass.

Gamers can buy “Minecraft Story Mode” episode 6, 7 and, 8 provided that they already downloaded, at least, one of the older episodes. Albeit, the content of these episodes has not been divulged as of now but according to Mojang claims the “game will be great, and will come with a different flavor.”

Minecraft Story Mode Episode 5 to Release on Mar. 29, Episodes 6, 7, 8 Coming Soon

Minecraft: Blockopedia – for full-on Minecraft geeks, as well as over-the-shoulder admirers

Minecraft: Blockopedia – for full-on Minecraft geeks, as well as over-the-shoulder admirers

Shaped like a hexagon to mimic the dimensions of a cube, Minecraft: Blockopedia is designed for full-on Minecraft geeks, although those of us who have only watched the game over the shoulders of children and loved ones will find plenty to admire here too. After the briefest of introductions and a quick glossary to help noobs make sense of the stats that accompany each block’s name, it’s off to the races, with page after page devoted to blocks made from rocks, blocks made from plants, blocks that serve particular functions (a ladder), and blocks that do particular things (acting as a switch).

One of the coolest characteristics about Minecraft is how it chooses to observe the laws of nature and physics, or ignore them. Sand, we are told, can be a cave-in hazard, but when it’s smelted in a furnace, it turns to glass. Both statements are true, but don’t go looking for glowstone the next time you’re spelunking – it is only found in a sinister dimension of Minecraft called the Nether. And while sugar cane in both the real world and the Overworld of Minecraft can be used to make sugar, guess where it can also be used to block flowing lava?

Though the format and illustrations in Minecraft: Blockopedia are the book’s most prominent features, it’s still a book filled with lots and lots of, you know, words. Writer Alex Wiltshire mostly plays it straight (“Water is incredibly useful.”), but often he lets the language and logic of Minecraft add color, as in “Sticky pistons are made by crafting a piston with a slimeball…” and “If you dig podzol without the silk touch enhancement it drops dirt.” Got that?

Minecraft: Blockopedia – for full-on Minecraft geeks, as well as over-the-shoulder admirers

Your kids want to make Minecraft YouTube videos – but should you let them?

Your kids want to make Minecraft YouTube videos – but should you let them?

Your kids want to make Minecraft YouTube videos – but should you let them?

Millions of children want to be the next Stampy or Diamond Minecart. How to do it is easy enough, but how to do it safely and appropriately is the bigger question

Minecraft has tens of millions of young fans – who are taking their crafting talents to YouTube.
 Minecraft has tens of millions of young fans – who are taking their crafting talents to YouTube. Photograph: Andrew Chin/Getty Images

That’s the dilemma facing a growing number of parents, whose children aren’t just watching YouTube Minecraft channels like The Diamond Minecart, Stampyand CaptainSparklez – they want to follow in their blocky footsteps.

“I want to make Minecraft videos and I want you to put them on YouTube,” was how my eight-year-old son put it recently. “I’ve been practising talking while I play, and I’m nearly as good as Stampy now.”

That’s some confidence. YouTuber Joseph “Stampy” Garrett has nearly 7.2 million subscribers to his channel, with videos that have been watched more than 4.8bn times.

His fellow Brit Dan “The Diamond Minecart” Middleton is even more popular, with just under 10 million subscribers and 6.3bn video views.

For tweens and teens around the world, these are the new pop stars. But whereas the historical cliche about pop fans has them miming with a hairbrush to their favourite stars’ songs, today’s children understand that they can do exactly what their Minecraft idols are doing, on the same stage – YouTube.

“I would say that the majority of my audience has tried making video, even if it’s just using their parents’ phone and filming the TV screen as they speak,” said Garrett, when I interviewed him for the Guardian in October 2015.

“Even if they’re not recording, they’re speaking as if they’re doing a video. At a recent event, I asked ‘who in the audience is a YouTuber?’ and the majority put their hand up: they all want to do it.”

For parents, this is sparking several questions. First, could their children really make Minecraft videos for YouTube, and if so, how? To which the short answers are “Yes” and “More easily than you think”.

A third question: should their children be allowed to make Minecraft videos for YouTube? That’s a bit more complicated, as I found out.

Stampy has inspired children to make their own Minecraft YouTube videos.
Pinterest
 Stampy has inspired children to make their own Minecraft YouTube videos.

Getting set up

In my case, the “how?” question had already been answered before my children – the eight year-old’s younger brother wasn’t going to be left out – developed their block-based broadcasting ambitions.

In 2014, I’d bought a £120 device called the Elgato Game Capture HD with the intention of producing some video reviews of apps. It sits in between your games console and computer, feeding video from the former into editing software on the latter. A USB Skype headset plugged in to the computer provided the means for spoken commentary while playing.

If your children play Minecraft on a PC or Mac, you don’t need the extra hardware (apart from a headset) – Google “screen capture” software and pick from options including Fraps, ScreenPresso, Ezvid, Bandicam and many more, with a range of prices.

The resulting videos can be uploaded to YouTube as they are, or edited using any video-editing software: iMovie on Macs, for example. Meanwhile, YouTube has clear instructions online for creating a new channel and uploading videos.

Parental guidance

With my sons demanding to try their hands at Minecraft YouTube videos, I had the kit and knowledge to do it. Deciding whether or not it was a good idea took a bit longer though.

YouTube has an increasingly diverse and fascinating community of creators making videos for children to watch, but I worried about allowing my kids to become creators themselves: from toxic comment threads to more general concerns about their privacy and safety offline as well as online.

With their teenage years ahead of them, my children will have ample opportunity to be made to feel awful by social media in the future. Would I be a bad parent for potentially exposing them to that even earlier?

I have no ambitions for my children to be the next Stampy or DanTDM, but like a lot of parents, I’d love them to find the ways they like to express themselves creatively – whether that’s writing stories, drawing and painting, making up songs and playing instruments, or other activities.

Making at least one Minecraft video and publishing it on YouTube seemed like a fun project, but one requiring some strict ground rules.

In our case, these included sitting both my sons down and explaining why I didn’t want them to use their real names in their videos – or to talk about their families, where they live or any other personal information.

Both had to make up their own characters, settling on “Percy Panther” and “Chickeny Chap”, and just as importantly remember those names while recording.

We agreed time limits on our recording sessions – half an hour per child split between three 10-minute episodes – and for my part, I learned how to disable comments on the uploaded videos.

Watching the results

So how was it for them, and for me? Our recording session was genuinely fun, with no worrying moments bar one son’s enthusiastic “HELLO! IT’S [FIRSTNAME] DREDGE FROM [TOWN NAME]” introduction when he forgot he was a virtual panther, requiring a swift restart.

Both children loved the creative challenge of making a good video: for example, switching to a camera view of their character at the start and end of each video to deliver their intros and sign-offs; and figuring out what the narrative arcs would be for the episodes beyond “wandering around and shouting”.

It surprised me how much they’d soaked up from watching their favourite online stars, too.

Sometimes that wasn’t such a good thing: both children nicked Stampy’s “BYYYYEEEEEEE!” signoff wholesale until I pointed out that their idol might be a bit miffed if he heard it.

But their ability to explain and entertain while building, fighting and tackling the Ender Dragon was hugely impressive. Today’s children are getting a broadcasting crash course whether in front of a camera or behind it with joypad.

One unforseen parental headache was the view-count aftermath of uploading each child’s first video to my YouTube channel. It really didn’t matter to me how many views they got, and I was secretly relieved that the totals were tiny: 31 and 14 respectively in the first few days after posting.

The problem, as any parent with more than one child will have spotted from that last paragraph, is that the totals weren’t the same: one son is twice as “popular” as the other, and he’s not shy of rubbing it in.

Foolishly, I hadn’t spotted that problem coming. On a more positive note, both are feeling proud as punch that they are “on YouTube like Stampy”, so the intense oneupmanship at home is hopefully being balanced by a boost to their playground credibility with their friends.

Having done it once, would I put my children on YouTube again? Yes, but not to make them famous. The joy of this process was in the making, not in the distribution.

I spent a couple of hours with my sons making something creative that they were excited about, with lots of laughter (and only a few stern rebukes about why the Chickeny Chap brand probably shouldn’t be so reliant on fart and bottom jokes).

I’m no Mrs Worthington, then. But in this case, responding positively to my children’s demands felt like a fun – and safe, with the ground rules – thing to do together.

Your kids want to make Minecraft YouTube videos – but should you let them?

Minecraft: Pocket Edition Realms Returning Soon

Minecraft: Pocket Edition Realms Returning Soon

While Minecraft: Pocket Edition grows closer and closer to the full Minecraft experience with each new update, it is still missing some features. One feature it doesn’t have is the ability to use Realms, which is also one of the more puzzling exclusions due to the history behind it.

Minecraft Realms are an alternative to regular online servers. You subscribe to a paid service which lets you set up a special Minecraft world, or realm, that only certain users can access. It doesn’t cost anything for participants, only for the player who hosts it. In this way, you can create a world for you and your friends without worrying about networks, IP addresses, etc.

While not all players consider Minecraft Realms worth the subscription fee, it’s a great alternative for people who prefer its convenience.

It’s not surprising that this feature wouldn’t be available in the mobile game, except that it was for a time. Minecraft: Pocket Edition had Realms until April 2014, when the feature was removed. Why? Some fans believe Mojang was just testing it, but it’s likely there was some problem with the system that prevented it from running ideally in the game. Whatever the case may be, Realms were no longer a part of Minecraft: Pocket Edition.

Fans found workarounds, but nothing was quite the same as Realms. Due to that change, in a curious reversal, Realms are available for the PC/Mac version of Minecraft, but not for Pocket Edition.

Ever since then, players have waited for Pocket Edition Realms to return.

Well, the long wait might be almost over. Mojang software engineer/game developer Philip V. sent out a Tweet on March 23 saying Realms was working with the Minecraft: Pocket Edition servers. When a fan asked if this meant Realms were returning, he replied that they’re putting the final touches on Realms for the beta, but he couldn’t give a release date yet.

Even without a release date or window, this shows Minecraft: Pocket Edition still has Realms in the future. For a while, it was such a thing of rumors and speculation, some players thought it would never come to pass.

We’ll keep you updated as we learn more about the Minecraft: Pocket Edition Realms beta. Have you ever used Minecraft Realms? Is it a feature you’d like to use, or would you rather avoid it and its fee? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Minecraft: Pocket Edition Realms Returning Soon

Get in line for Minecraft’s first live concert

Get in line for Minecraft’s first live concert

We’ve seen a working phone coded inside Minecraft, we’ve also even seen someone build a terminal so you can code on a computer inside it, now its legions of fans will be able enjoy the platform’s first live concert.

Electronic music artists from the UK and Norway are set to open Norwegian tech festival The Gathering with a live gig that will also be played out inside Minecraft as the real thing happens.

Run an awesome startup?

“There have been plenty of other music experiences in the Minecraft universe, but not like this,” Gathering organizer Erik Heisholt told Norwegian website The Local. “This will be the world’s first live Minecraft concert.”

It’s also being promoted on billboards inside the game and will be livestreamed at 9PM (CET) tomorrow at the opening of the event.

Those who want to join inside Minecraft will have to be quick though as the server being used can only accommodate around 3,000 people watching.

Here’s a preview that gives you some idea of what to expect.

Åpningsshow TG 16 i MinecraftDette blir så kult! Artistene har siste gjennomkjøring på scenen akkurat nå. Er du klar for å kjempe deg gjennom Minecraft-verdenen for å komme først til scenen? Følg også vår live stream fra Vikingskipet på https://stream.tg16.gathering.org/

Posted by The Gathering on Tuesday, 22 March 2016

 

 Norway to host world’s first Minecraft concert [The Local via Mashable]

Featured image credit: The Gathering

Get in line for Minecraft’s first live concert