‘SculptrVR’ brings ‘Minecraft’-style creation to Google Daydream

When Google’s Daydream headset came out, we praised it for its comfortable construction, but noted its bare game library. Little by little, the platform is adding experiences, even if many are ports that have already had successful runs on other VR platforms. Today, Daydream got its own version of SculptrVR, a Minecraft-like world-building sandbox game that had previously been released for Oculus Rift and HTC Vive.

It’s great news if you’re sad that Minecraft hasn’t come to Daydream yet and want to play with your VR-owning PC friends. That might be due to the mobile platform’s controller, fans have speculated, which isn’t nearly as agile as those on other VR platforms, like Oculus Rift’s Touch. It’s a shame, since creative experiences flourish in virtual reality — just look at Google’s Tilt Brush, which has gotten multiple ports and updates. In any case, download SculptrVR from the Google Play store here.

‘SculptrVR’ brings ‘Minecraft’-style creation to Google Daydream

Is Minecraft going free-to-play? GamesBeat Decides

Microsoft is continuing to make huge moves with its Minecraft brand, and that could lead to some even bigger changes in the future.

On this week’s GamesBeat Decides podcast, host Jeffrey Grubb and co-host Mike Minotti go over the news from the last week. Then in the second half of the show, they speculate on what it means that Minecraft is going free-to-play in China while it gets a marketplace where players can sell content to one another.

Is this a precursor to one of gaming’s biggest hits going free-to-play everywhere? Listen to hear what we decide.


Listen to the GamesBeat Decides podcast


In addition to Minecraft, Jeff and Mike check in on Overwatch and its latest cooperative event. Is this what we want from the shooter? We’ll make a decision about that as well.

Join us, won’t you?

Disagree with something we said? Have a comment or question? Email the podcast here at: games+podcast@venturebeat.com. Or tweet at us: @GBDecides.

Click play below for the audio version or on the video above:

Is Minecraft going free-to-play? GamesBeat Decides

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

Minecraft Coming To Nintendo Switch Next Month

Nintendo has announced that Microsoft’s Minecraft will launch digitally for Nintendo Switch on May 11, with a physical release coming “at a later date.” The Japanese publisher confirmed the news in its most recent Direct stream, in which Splatoon 2 and Arms also got release dates of July 21 and June 16, respectively.

Nintendo also confirmed that the Switch version will support both online and local multiplayer. Eight players can play together online, while up to four can craft at once on the TV in split-screen or in tabletop mode.

In addition, Minecraft’s Super Mario mash-up pack will also come to Switch, allowing you to explore blocky versions of Mushroom Kingdom-themed worlds alongside characters such as Luigi and Waluigi.

This Switch edition is seemingly being handled by 4J Studios, the developer that previously brought Mojang’s PC version of Minecraft to Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, PS Vita, and Wii U. Telltale’s narrative-driven adaptation, Minecraft: Story Mode has also been confirmed for Nintendo Switch, meanwhile, though we don’t yet know when that is due out.

Microsoft recently revealed that some versions of Minecraft will get a new marketplace where you can buy user-generated skins and maps, among other items. That store isn’t coming to Switch, however, as it is limited–for the moment at least–to the PC and mobile editions.

Minecraft Coming To Nintendo Switch Next Month

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.

No Caption Provided

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

‘Minecraft’ DLC Update: Power Rangers Arrive in the Sandbox Game

One of the classic superhero groups loved by most ’90s kids, the Power Rangers, found their way to “Minecraft” recently.

MojangThe Power Rangers skin pack arrive in “Minecraft”

Mojang, the developer of the game “Minecraft,” has recently put up an all-new Power Rangers skin pack that will let players dress characters on their “Minecraft” games as Blue, Pink, Red, Black, and Yellow Power Rangers.

To complete the experience, the Power Rangers downloadable content also comes with skins for some of the most famous villains of the franchise including Rita Repulsa, Bulk and Skull.

The Power Rangers skin pack is available on “Minecraft” Pocket, Console, and Windows 10 platforms for $2.99 and will take up a bit over 10 MB memory space.

One of the people who designed the skin pack, Mike Fielder, recalled how as a child he would go home from school and just be excited about 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,” Fielder shared through the official announcement of the DLC.

Though the developers did not mention it on their official blog post, the release of the Power Rangers skin pack on “Minecraft” is obviously not far from the recent premiere of the franchise reboot on the big screen.

The “Power Rangers” 2017 reboot opened in movie theaters across the United States last week. About a week since its release, the movie has reportedly racked up more than $73 million in box office worldwide. The movie’s plot features high schoolers coming to terms with their newly-found superpowers and stars actors Dacre Montgomery as Red Ranger, Naomi Scott as Pink Ranger, RJ Cyler as Blue Ranger, Becky G as Yellow Ranger and Ludi Lin as Black Ranger teaming up to defeat Rita Repulsa (Elizabeth Banks).

‘Minecraft’ DLC Update: Power Rangers Arrive in the Sandbox Game

Minecraft’s Next Big Update Detailed

Minecraft‘s Discovery Update is coming to Windows 10 and Pocket Editions, bringing with it more exploration options and journeys into woodland mansions. Oh, and llamas.

“Barter with a cartographer for a treasure map,” and seek out your fortune, according to the official Minecraft blog. The maps lead you to woodland mansions where you can duke it out with Illagers, “villagers gone bad,” for treasure.

The Discovery Update is similar to the Exploration Update implemented in vanilla Minecraft back in November, which saw the introduction of llamas as tameable mobs used as pack animals. Llamas are part of the Discovery Update and have similar functionality to the Llamas in Minecraft on PC.

A new Adventure Mode is also coming with the update, “for folks who like to make custom games and scenarios.”

The Discovery Update beta is coming to the Android version of Pocket Edition “very soon,” and more information can be found on the official Minecraft blog “in the coming weeks.”

Minecraft consistently appears in the top of the NPD Group’s monthly US sales listings, and its popularity doesn’t seem to show any signs of slowing down. Minecraft is coming to Nintendo Switch, making it the first Nintendo portable to have a version of the game.

Minecraft’s Next Big Update Detailed

Games that are going to blow everyone away in 2017

There’s no denying 2016 was a fantastic year for video games. Honestly, the gaming industry is spoiling us rotten, and we’re thrilled. Want to get hyped for the amazing games 2017 has in store? So do we.

For some, Resident Evil 4 marks the spot where the franchise fell off the map: parts 5 and 6 were its most unremarkable installments. But with a jaw-dropping debut at E3 2016 during Sony’s press conference, Resident Evil 7 rekindled gamers’ desires to find themselves dangerously low on ammo while desperately fleeing shambling horrors and grotesque mutations. This chapter welcomes a new main character to the series, and in its biggest change yet, the game will play entirely first-person. Capcom even promises full virtual reality support, allowing players to play the game from beginning to end in VR.

Get ready for one bloody valentine. With so many alpha gameplay videos on YouTube, it’s easy to forget that For Honor has yet to be officially released. An online hack and slash game, For Honor pits factions of knights, vikings, and samurai against each other in a fight to the death. Developed by Ubisoft Montreal, it looks to bring together the best aspects of Chivalry: Medieval Warfare, War of the Vikings, and Samurai Warriors in one medieval fantasy setting. Closed beta starts in January (register here), with the official release slated for February 14, 2017.

Halo is one of the biggest video game franchises in history, and in 2017 it’ll return to its real-time strategy roots. It’s been a long time since the original Halo Wars hit shelves—Halo Wars 2 will drop almost exactly seven years after the release of its predecessor—but Total War developer Creative Assembly promises to make it worth the wait, putting the series in the capable hands of RTS masters.

Originality can sometimes feel like it comes at a premium in the game industry. That’s why it’s refreshing to see a game with as bonkers a premise as Horizon Zero Dawn: 1,000 years in the future, mankind has been reduced to a series of caveman-like tribal groups as the world has reverted back to a pre-historic landscape of lush greenery and dangerous wild animals…that are robots. Yep, a world where every animal is a robot. Unraveling that mystery should be as fun to as Horizon Zero Dawn’s gameplay looked in its E3 demo during Sony’s 2016 press conference. Guerrilla Games’ track record with the Killzone series proves they can create engaging gameplay, and they’re not slouching with the story, either, as they’ve brought on the writer of Fallout: New Vegas to pen the script.

It’s hard to blame Nintendo for keeping the Zelda franchise relatively unchanged for so long. If it works, don’t try to fix it; just add and modify and twist into new shapes to deliver new yet familiar experiences. It’s a different story for The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, which promises a more open and fully exportable world than any Zelda game before it and will be available on both WiiU and Switch. This latest entry shares more in common with Skyrim and Far Cry than traditional entries in the series. Dungeons can be explored in any order; the final boss fight could be fought, and won, at the start of the game, assuming players are crazy (and skilled) enough to pull it off. It’s a Zelda unlike any other: it hands you a controller and truly puts you in control.

The first game presented at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017, 1 2 Switch is the spiritual successor to the underrated motion-controlled masterpiece WarioWare: Smooth Moves for Nintendo Wii. In a revolutionary twist on the concept of a video game, 1 2 Switch turns the screen into an accessory; players focus on each other’s eyes and faces. It’s a party game about reflexes, psyching your opponent out, and striking silly poses along the way. We can’t wait to try it. A Nintendo Switch launch title, 1 2 Switch hits shelves March 3, 2017.

The Ghost Recon series is taking a cue from Metal Gear Solid 5 and Grand Theft Auto 5 by removing the idea of levels and setting the upcoming Ghost Recon Wildlands in an enormous open world rife with Bolivian drug cartel baddies who are eagerly anticipating being shot in the back of the head as they stand around guarding an abandoned warehouse. Wildlands features a robust single-player campaign that will have gamers exploring every square inch of terrain for dozens of hours. But the online multiplayer co-op is where the game promises to shine, as you and some buddies can go on raids and chase down escaping drug traffickers from the comfort of your own underwear.

Commander Shepard isn’t the only thing the Mass Effect series is leaving behind. It’s abandoning the Milky Way galaxy and setting up shop on the Citadel in our celestial neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy. All new planets. All new terrain. All new alien races. Actually, by definition, you will be playing the invading alien race of the series. Set centuries after the events of the original Mass Effect trilogy, the new series has you controlling a new protagonist, named Ryder, whose mission is to discover a new planet for the human race to call home.

Obsidian Entertainment’s South Park: The Stick of Truth surprised us in 2014. A mechanically sound RPG with a long campaign, enjoyable combat, hilarious writing, and fan service galore, Stick of Truth renewed gamers’ trust in the franchise. (If you played the mediocre South Park games for N64 and Playstation, you know all too well why they might have been skeptical.) A D&D parody, The Stick of Truth contained four classes (Fighter, Mage, Thief, and Jew), while the superhero-themed The Fractured But Whole features twelve (Brutalist, Blaster, Speedster, Elementalist, Gadgeteer, Mystic, Cyborg, Psychic, Assassin, Commander, Netherborn, and Karate Kid). By all accounts, The Fractured But Whole is going to be bigger and better than its predecessor.

Rabid fans of the Persona series—is there are any other kind?—have waited eight excruciating years for the next official installment. The last to see release, Persona 4, came out in 2008 for the PlayStation 2. But 2017 will change all that with another turn-based RPG adventure for the PlayStation 4. In the new installment you’ll spend a year in the shoes of the new kid at Shujin High School as he and his fellow students use their “persona” powers, or manifestations of their psyche, to battle a shadowy group known only as the Phantom Thieves of Hearts.

Designers who worked on Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong Country have formed Playtonic Games to develop the upcoming Yooka-Laylee. Funded in 2015 by 80,000 Kickstarter backers, the game aspires to be a “collect-em-up for the modern era.” Note the hyphenated title. That’s no accident. It’s meant to make us nostalgic for the N64’s golden era—and it’s working. April 11 can’t arrive soon enough.

NetherRealm, the makers of Mortal Kombat, shocked the world with Injustice. Finally, we could live out childhood dreams of pitting Superman and Batman against one another in a fight to find out—once and for all—who would win. Or Superman vs. the Flash. Or Doomsday vs. Lex Luthor. Even better, the game was great. Injustice 2 will feature gameplay mechanics similar to the original, like the trait system and the game’s show-stopping super moves, while offering new twists, like a loot-dropping system that allows players to collect gear during fights that offer costume-specific upgrades altering play.

Don’t call Outlast fun; it isn’t fun. It’s stressful, upsetting, haunting, and the best first-person survival horror game this side of Alien: Isolation over the last ten years. Inspired by the Amnesia series, first-time developer Red Barrels’ first game surpassed its forebears in virtually every way, capturing the horror of being trapped among the violently the insane in an asylum. Trading the deranged sanitarium for an upside-down cross-burning, backwoods religious cult, Outlast II should be another not-fun masterpiece of survival horror. It’s already piqued gamers’ interest in unexpected ways: for instance, the original teaser featured a creepy reversed audio clip of a preacher menacingly reading from the Bible.

The Witcher 3 was an astounding game with another great game hidden deep inside, like a Russian nesting doll of video games. This hidden game, a card game called Gwent, was originally made by a couple of designers at CD Projekt Red in their spare time. It impressed the higher-ups and made it into The Witcher 3, where it became something of an obsession among diehard fans, who loved it so much that many made their own standalone versions. Now it’s becoming a standalone title in the style of Hearthstone, but with a twist—this release is a collectable card game with single-player campaigns.

Announced by Kosuke Yabuki at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017, Arms looks like a mix of Wii Sports’ boxing, shooting, and WiiFit. The motion controls make use of the joycons’ gyroscopic technology. Expect to sweat as you dash and jump around, using jabs, hooks, and special attacks to beat your opponent to a pulp. And it’s all set in a bright, crisp art-style reminiscent of both Splatoon for the Wii U and Ready 2 Rumble: Boxing, a classic of the N64 era. Step into the arena in spring 2017.

Fullbright Company turned some heads after they departed Irrational Games and released Gone Home, a little game about 21-year-old girl who comes home from overseas and is greeted by an empty house she must explore to unravel the mystery of her sister’s coming-of-age story. The studio’s follow-up, Tacoma, takes place on a derelict space station 200,000 miles from Earth. As with Gone Home, players must explore the empty vessel to discover what happened to the crew. Players won’t encounter any actual people; instead, the ship has recorded the voices and movements of its crew members and replays them as holograms that the player must follow to unravel the ship’s mystery.

Technically, the latest installment of the Tekken series has already been out since February 2015…but only in Japan, where it had a limited arcade release. In 2017 it’ll finally reach western shores, and it’ll finally be playable on everything that can play video games, except the Wii U. According to its E3 2016 trailer, the seventh chapter of the long-running series will include a new addition to the roaster of classic Tekken characters: Street Fighter’s Akuma. Sadly, it’s rumored that he may be the only Street Fighter character making a cameo.

The segment on Splatoon 2 at the Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017 was one of our favorite highlights. Nintendo’s clever, family-friendly take on ruthless hardcore shooters, the squid ink-spattered Splatoon was a notable high-point of the Wii U’s short life span. New arenas, game modes, special weapons, and new types of inklings mean the turf war will be even crazier the second time around. The next one promises network play and local multiplayer, as well as multiple control schemes. Join the turf war this summer.

Inspired by old Mickey Mouse cartoons, Cuphead in Don’t Deal with the Devil aspires to be a playable old-timey cartoon with side-scrolling, platforming, retro charm. In development for several years, it’s the brainchild of first-time indie developer Studio MDHR. Rumor has it the designers are putting their finishing touches on the co-op mode. No further delays are anticipated—which is good news for Disney and Rayman Legends fans alike.

The long-awaited third installment in the Shenmue franchise will finally, mercifully be released in 2017. Yi Syzuki’s series, which began way back in the Dreamcast days, was years ahead of its time. Sadly, despite mounds of critical praise, it proved a commercial failure—which is why the gaming community was blown away when Sony announced during its 2015 E3 presser that a Kickstarter fundraiser had been started to gauge interest in a possible Shenmue 3. Within nine hours its $2 million goal had been surpassed; all in all, $6.6 million was raised, making it the most heavily funded game in Kickstarter history.

We know a lot more than we once did about Super Mario Odyssey. The game takes place in strange worlds beyond the Mushroom Kingdom, including one similar to our own. Mario wears a sentient cap with googly eyes on it. He uses the cap to perform special jumps. In combat, he makes like Oddjob from the Bond movies–or Kung Lao from Mortal Kombat–and flings it at his enemies. He also flies around in a tugboat-spaceship because of course he does. The gameplay looks even smoother than Super Mario Galaxy’s. Look for Mario’s familiar face this holiday season.

Suda51 is an oddball, but he makes compelling games. The No More Heroes games were blood-spattered reasons to get a Wii and a Wii U. Killer is Dead puts a purple-drenched, psychedelic spin on Seijun Suzuki’s already nonsensical–and just as brilliant–hit man movies. Whatever Suda51 is working on for Nintendo Switch, you can trust it will be both weird and worth a look.

Volition is taking a breaking from the wild and ridiculous Saints Row series to bring us…a Saints Row spinoff! Set sometime after the events of Saint’s Row: Gat out of Hell, Agents of Mayhem is an open world third-person action game that revolves around an anti-terrorist organization known as—you guessed it—Agents of Mayhem, who are trying to stop the evil terrorist organization Legion from destroying the world. Players can swap between one of three characters on the fly in the midst of battle. Perform a stun maneuver to freeze all enemies on the battlefield, and instantly swap in another character that can kill them all with a well-placed grenade. It may not be Saints Row, but for now it’ll do just fine.

Atlus’s Megami Tensei series, and its multiple spin-off series–such as the Persona games about teenagers who fight demons–are a lot of fun. These turn-based JRPGs have amassed a devoted following for being a weirder, headier alternative to the Final Fantasy series. A Shin Megami Tensei is early in development for Nintendo Switch.

Since we’re on the subject of Saints Row, why not mention a game similar in terms of tone and gameplay? By the time Crackdown 3 comes out, it’ll have been six years since its predecessor debuted. What has Ruffian Games been up to all this time? Well, truthfully, no one really knows. Not much has been revealed about Crackdown 3. But what we do know is exciting: it’ll feature an open world sandbox like the previous games in the series, for sure, and judging from the trailer shown off at Microsoft’s 2015 Gamescom presentation, gamers will be transported to a massively destructive city that you can level with your god-like powers.

Games that are going to blow everyone away in 2017