Posted July 05, 2019

carpediem15
New User
Registered: Jun 2017
From United States

Dray2k
Don't read this
Registered: Jun 2011
From Germany
Posted July 05, 2019

Anyone know any good, simple guides that can explain this game? Please don't let me get outdone by a child.
To give an example, back when I played Minecraft I found it boring and then started building stuff, then I found "The Minecraft i was looking for". Played it probably for hundreds of hours just building stuff.
So not knowing how to play is actually the way to play. Its like playing with Legos. Using a rulebook here is shooting yourself in your foot. Just roll with it and once you start "feeling the fun" then you understand what I mean by all of this.
Post edited July 05, 2019 by Dray2k

carpediem15
New User
Registered: Jun 2017
From United States
Posted July 05, 2019

My nephew is almost 8 and likes MC and some clone called Roblox or other crappy knockoffs. A few months ago I was looking into buying MC as well to play with him, which would be much better than let his brain rot by constantly watching "junior youtubers" that play these games while talking and behaving like they don't have two neurons to rub together. It doesn't just feel like they're five year olds, it's more like they're five y.o. with severe brain damage... except I'm talking about people in their late teens or early twenties.
My nephew likes these videos, and I cringe every time I'm forced to spend thirty seconds around them. So I wanted to buy the game to play with him... except I gave up exactly because I didn't know the sorts of things the OP asks.
Edit: I agree with the poster above me, going at it as if you want to finish, just kills the experience. The only thing you might need to know is the crafting recipes. Other then that, do whatever the heck you want.
Post edited July 05, 2019 by carpediem15

mqstout
Pittsburgh cis-gay-male
Registered: Jun 2010
From United States
Posted July 05, 2019
Have a PS4 or Switch? Dragon Quest Builders is everything Minecraft wanted to be but sucked at: an actual game. #2 comes out next week, but you needn't skip #1.
On GOG, try Craft the World. It's a 2d indirect-control tile-based builder.
Reading the URL -- where the dash between the numbers is missing -- I thought tinyE was looking for game recommendations.
On GOG, try Craft the World. It's a 2d indirect-control tile-based builder.
Reading the URL -- where the dash between the numbers is missing -- I thought tinyE was looking for game recommendations.
Post edited July 05, 2019 by mqstout

Cadaver747
Registered: Mar 2009
From Russian Federation
Posted July 05, 2019
It was several years ago and what I remember is that Minecraft launcher installed Java files on my PC as well. I may be wrong but for some reason I thought that Java icon appeared in Control Panel after Minecraft installation and that I had to update installed Java for some other projects since then. But there is no way to check it now.
Post edited July 05, 2019 by Cadaver747

InkPanther
Registered: Sep 2008
From Poland
Posted July 05, 2019
It goes more or less like this:
You hear hiss, you panic, you go boom, you respawn.
You hear hiss, you panic, you go boom, you respawn.

Dray2k
Don't read this
Registered: Jun 2011
From Germany
Posted July 05, 2019

Most people need a sort of disclaimer and direction. Almost instinctively a player knows how to play a FPS or a car racing game, if you leave these descriptors out of the gameplay elements itself (as in, make a game where you can do whatever the fuck you want) suddendly people become confused. Minecraft is a unique case because the developer didn't fully intend the game to be this open. The easiest to understand example I have is that this sense of freedom-of-play is similar to buying a lego set but not follwing the instructions but instead create your own unique thing with it. Its MInecrafts strongest point because it is bound by the players willingness to ignore the rules it in turn also becomes more timeless than any other game that is similar, unless it is as free as Minecraft is.
There is an exeption of this rule where both freedom and direction to the same degree can coexist which is Terraria. IMHO its almost perfectly balanced in its freedom (you can choose to not play by the rules at all but rather just build), while also providing a sense of direction through boss battles. Both of these paths are rewarding on their own, however they're still intended by the developer. In most cases, freedom within games are unintentional by the devs, which is why modding always bring is this sort of uncertainty of freedom since you never know what your audience comes up with (same goes with Minecraft mods and what kind of stuff those mods add). With Freedom also always comes uncertainty and the same rule apply to games obviously, I feel that this "open" genre is always the most prone to become hit or miss for that very reason.
To OP: If you think Minecraft is too weird to grasp (which is quite common actually), try let your kid be interested into Terraria instead. I'm fairly certain that most young people who enjoyed Minecraft will also enjoy Terraria while those who don't get the appeal of Minecraft have a very high chance of understanding Terraria.
Post edited July 05, 2019 by Dray2k

jepsen1977
Nemo
Registered: Mar 2009
From Denmark
Posted July 05, 2019
Check the achievements in the game for ideas of what can be done in MC. They give a kind of roadmap to follow.

dnovraD
2023-08-14: Remember the Spaces!
Registered: Jul 2012
From United States
Posted July 05, 2019
The latest versions have a crafting guide.

PookaMustard
モニカ。モニカだけ。
Registered: Jun 2013
From Other
Posted July 05, 2019
I played Minecraft for way too much. You can ask me anything.

InkPanther
Registered: Sep 2008
From Poland

PookaMustard
モニカ。モニカだけ。
Registered: Jun 2013
From Other

tfishell
Remorse: The List, if you like FPS psych horror
Registered: Oct 2010
From United States

misteryo
you are required to own on gog
Registered: Sep 2008
From United States

InkPanther
Registered: Sep 2008
From Poland
Posted July 05, 2019
Kao the Kangaroo ;) perhaps