There are sim city minecraft mods Minecraft is NOT sim city but if you add a sim city mod, you can make it into sim city.
Peasants can be good/bad/neutral - depends. You can barter/trade with them. Kill them all off and take over their village. Ignore them completely.... Whatever. Depends on what you want to accomplish. |
Aside from mods there are "adventure maps" which can also be added to minecraft. Adventure maps are basically premade worlds that you can play in such as Zelda, Star Wars, rain forests, outer space, haunted houses, etc. Some of them have quests or goals to attain. Adventure maps can be used in conjunction with mods. |
| Well, now I am interested. My kids have been asking for minecraft, but I thought it was just an xbox game and said no. Where is a good place to start learning about it? |
My kids led my education on PC Minecraft by watching youtube and asking me to download mods. I was okay with them watching youtube videos of certain people, including DanTDM (as I knew they would be okay - no bad words). Maybe others can suggest different Minecraft "youtubers"! Initially, though, just download the game on your PC and let your kids at it. I soon had to get it on the laptop as well, since they both wanted to play together. Then let them have playdates and learn from their friends. It's very organic! They'll pick stuff up by talking about it at school. When it comes time to download mods, I found this helpful: http://minemum.com/installing-mods |
You can download minecraft here: https://minecraft.net/ It costs $26.95 but all the mods and adventure maps are FREE! Learning how to find, download and install mods are part of the learning process. Some kids will go on to writing their own mods if they are interested. If your kids want to play against each other in computer minecraft on a LAN/server, you will need to buy each of them their own game. Like pp said, youtube is a great resource for all things Minecraft as are the tons of minecraft forums devoted to minecraft. Enjoy! |
| My son likes the Youtube videos as well. I have been hesitant to give him the Apple TV remote to skim for these unsupervised because there are a lot of gamers that don't use appropriate language for kids. |
This is my problem. I'm fine on the computer but the youtube "tutorials" are atrocious! I can't be there all the time to monitor the good from the bad. He is smart and he starts off with the mild ones when I'm around and before I know it bang, I hear the foul language. some of these youtube ones are over the top. |
| My 9 year old kid is not interested in the zombie mode, but she's enjoyed building houses and gardens notwithstanding the time she built a hole, fell in and couldn't get out. She's taking a minecraft class afterschool that supposedly helps introduce kids to coding. |
| My daughter's (9) behavior is atrocious after she plays minecraft. So we say no. |
| To all the people who swear it is the greatest learning tool ever- Be honest how much are you using it as a babysitter and just justifying that it is any different than sitting your kid in front of a video game? |
People claimed that it's the greatest learning tool ever? Hmm... I missed that. And why do you care about other people "using" it or allowing their kids to play it? Are you that insecure? |
11.29 here. I believe I said that it's a tool, and any tool can be misused. I don't use it as a babysitter at all. I'm a live-in nanny, and I make sure that there are no screens while I am with the kids unless it is required for school or balances more towards education than fun (Khan Academy and the like). When they are with their parents, it's up to the parents. One former employer allowed 1 hour per week, another allowed two non-consecutive hours per week, and I'm not sure how many youtube videos they were allowed, but it came out of their weekly television time. I view looking online with me for articles and walk-throughs for Minecraft as weighing more towards education, because none of them have been easy reads for my charges, and they're learning to research. They are learning to advocate for what they want and present a compelling argument. They are reading non-fiction informational pieces, and they are learning to pull the information they need while ignoring what they don't need. And most important to me: they want to read, they want to research and they've found something that holds their interest enough that they want to learn anything and everything about it. |
Minecraft is a video game. My kid likes it and as long as he does everything else he is suppose to do, he can play as much Minecraft as he wants. I don't think everything a child does has to be educational although my DS learned to read and type on Minecraft. -signed, the middle aged mom who knows more about Minecraft than she should. |
| We don't do XBox/Playstation type games in our home (went to school with too many people who went from promising student to barely there wash-outs because of video game addiction) but we do allow Minecraft and a few kid friendly Ipad games. If the homework is done and academics are on track, there can be time for a little fun. The kids lose iPad privileges if they start getting too worked up when it's time to shut 'er down. |
| I think OP that speaks more about your child than Minecraft. My 7 and 9 year olds have created elaborate worlds in Minecraft. They don't discuss killing animals though. |