It is more than just the video game version of Lego.
Join MrSavageGamer as we celebrate gaming history and give recognition to the most influential games of the current 21st century. These aren't the best games till the date, and they aren't necessary games that you need to rush out and play today only, but there's no question that they left an indelible impact on the game developers, players, and in some cases, society at large. Maybe or may not.
The success of Lego should have foretold how popular Minecraft would have become. Both Lego and Minecraft are built on the same idea: the joy of creating
something extraordinary from many pieces of ordinary blocks. Today, Minecraft
has grown beyond this simple premises to become one of the best-selling video
games of all time, with nearly a dozen versions existing across PC, console,
handhelds, mobile, and on VR platforms.
Of course, it takes more than popularity to be influential,
and we wouldn't have included Minecraft in this list if all it was known for
was being well-known. Minecraft launched into a gaming industry that was mostly
devoid of standout successes from solo developers. Months before Jonathan
Blow's 2009 Braid sparked
the push for indie games to enter the mainstream limelight, Minecraft released
in beta and helped lay the kindling. Many
individual indie developers found success in the wake of Minecraft,
Braid, Super Meat Boy,
and other 2009-2010's indie game success stories. The popularity of these indie
games at the turn of the decade pushed indie gaming into the mainstream and
created a new demand that continues to exist alongside the triple-A market.
Years later, this push for more indie games would create spaces for major indie
titles to thrive, such as Stardew Valley, Undertale, Iconoclasts, Gone Home, and Return of the Obra
Dinn--the latter of which is even one
of GameSpot's best games of 2018.
But even before indie gaming took off, Minecraft had a more
immediate effect on the gaming industry. Though in no other easy way (anyone who
tells you different has never tried to make a complex Redstone circuit),
Minecraft remains one of the most accessible games out there. When Minecraft
first launched, it offered a means for plenty of people to pick up and play a
video game for the first time. You don't need fine motor skills or perfect
vision to play Minecraft, and the game doesn't require a high-end PC to run.
Younger players could easily jump into Minecraft because you could play
it on most low-end PCs and because there wasn't a huge learning curve to it.
Plus, Minecraft has no definitive end. It's a game designed to appeal to
people's inner creativity, allowing them to play in open sandboxes and
continue building for as long as they want. There wasn't much like Minecraft
before it is accessible enough for pretty much anyone anywhere in the world and yet complex enough to
keep you playing for years. But thanks in large part to its popularity, it
would not be the last game. Other games would emulate Minecraft's mechanics and
features, or promise similar experiences.
Perhaps it
goes without saying, considering its popularity, but Minecraft has been a hit
with lots of critics since it was released. In MrSavageGamer's initial Minecraft review,
published when the title left beta and officially launched in 2011, the game was given a score of 8.5/10, critic writing, "Visual glitches pop in at
regular intervals, and some game elements seem incomplete or thrown together in
haste. What's amazing is that the core game is so ridiculously absorbing these little flaws matter in the grand scheme of things. Even in its current solid form, Minecraft remains one of the most conceptually impressive indie games out
there. It's a game changer to be sure in the future and one that will live on in the edges of gaming history for a long time to come." We'd continue to critically
praise Minecraft as it evolved and released on different platforms, with
additional reviews devoted to the Xbox 360 version in
2012 and PS3, Xbox One, and PS4 versions in 2014.
While
Minecraft evolved and became more complex over the past few years, it continued to influence the rest
of the gaming industry. Survival games that relied on complex crafting systems,
like 7 Days to Die,
emerged in the wake of Minecraft, as did sandbox games that focused on crafting
better tools to build structures, such as Terraria. Scavenging,
hunting, crafting, and base building snuck their way into more mainstream
genres as well. The first-person shooter Far Cry series began restructuring
itself around crafting as a means of survival with 2012's Far Cry 3, for example,
and you can find elements of base building in games like Gears of War 3 (specifically
trap placement in horde mode) and the battle royale game Fortnite.
The impact Minecraft has had on the industry for the past decade is irrefutable, even if the game's influence has changed and evolved over the years.
Minecraft
helped create some of gaming's first social media stars, too--a role that,
today, we call "influencer." Halo: Combat Evolved is
largely responsible for the resurgence of machinima in the 21st century, but
people also found success in creating step-by-step build instructions for complex
structures in Minecraft--which went on to inspire "how to" and guide
videos in other games. The "Let's Play" community latched onto
Minecraft as well, as the game offers an easy way to play with friends in a
variety of ways for a very long time. And with the rise of game influencers,
more developers realized curating experiences that could last for months or
years through near-constant updates and expansions, like Minecraft, is an
an important part of getting free marketing from popular YouTubers and Twitch
streamers.
Today, Minecraft is still changing. It has a battle Royale-inspired mode called Hunger Games and an Education Edition of the game are included in some classrooms to help teachers explore a variety of topics with their students, such as STEM and liberal arts. Minecraft even has a story now, with credits that roll once you've completed the lengthy quest of tracking down and slaying the Ender Dragon. Both official expansions and fan-created mods continue to add new content to the PC version of the game, ranging from space travel to Pokémon. Minecraft is one of the strongest examples that is made with the idea of longevity in mind, certain games can just stubbornly last and evolve to fit the current market. In Consoles? Yes, Minecraft is there. In Handhelds? Minecraft thrives on both Switch and mobile devices. In Virtual reality? Not only does Minecraft exist on VR headsets but an AR version has been revealed as well. Minecraft will surely make the jump to cloud gaming too.
Today, Minecraft is still changing. It has a battle Royale-inspired mode called Hunger Games and an Education Edition of the game are included in some classrooms to help teachers explore a variety of topics with their students, such as STEM and liberal arts. Minecraft even has a story now, with credits that roll once you've completed the lengthy quest of tracking down and slaying the Ender Dragon. Both official expansions and fan-created mods continue to add new content to the PC version of the game, ranging from space travel to Pokémon. Minecraft is one of the strongest examples that is made with the idea of longevity in mind, certain games can just stubbornly last and evolve to fit the current market. In Consoles? Yes, Minecraft is there. In Handhelds? Minecraft thrives on both Switch and mobile devices. In Virtual reality? Not only does Minecraft exist on VR headsets but an AR version has been revealed as well. Minecraft will surely make the jump to cloud gaming too.
And despite being 10 years old, Minecraft still manages to
inspire the inclusion of new features in other games. Alongside games like Rocket League and
Fortnite, Minecraft is still at the forefront of the charge to include cross-platform play in games. One of the first major games to ever support cross-platform
play, Minecraft's PC, Switch, mobile, and Xbox One versions all support the
feature with each other.
The impact that Minecraft has/had on the industry for the past few decades is irrefutable and imperishable, even if
the game's influence has changed and evolved over the years. In its humble
beginnings, Minecraft stood as a counterpoint to developers worries that
releasing an indie game in beta against triple-A giants might be a mistake.
Minecraft reminded the 21st century that games didn't need detailed narratives,
challenging gameplay, or HD graphics to be popular. A game that's accessible
for all can create a community built to last, and one that's open to updates
and expansions can endure for a decade. Since it's officially launching in 2011,
Minecraft has changed how we experience games as well, helping us create a
community of internet personalities and building support for cross-platform
play. And, of course, Minecraft has also just had a huge effect on how survival
games work by creating an emphasis on crafting and building to outlast threats.
Minecraft may not have inspired brand-new ways to experience
games like 2006's Wii Sports or created and popularized an entirely
new subgenre like 2011's Dark Souls, but the
influence it has/had in the 21st century is no less prevalent.