Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am apparently the next to last parent to allow it and trying to figure it out now.
Why is it so effing complicated?
You shouldn't be figuring it out. If your children are interested, they can and should figure it out themselves. As tweens, this is well within their capacity. It does mean you will need to allow them internet access. But everything they need is online.
We have a rule in my household that I don't do tech support for my kids with games. I do it for school and required things, but games are something they have to figure out themselves. As a result, they are technically very adept. I'm not rigid about it -- they can ask my opinion of course -- but they have to drive it, not me.
Anonymous wrote:Ladies! Minecraft is like a social LEGOs group for your kids. Really fun and creative. And can be collaborative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am apparently the next to last parent to allow it and trying to figure it out now.
Why is it so effing complicated?
You shouldn't be figuring it out. If your children are interested, they can and should figure it out themselves. As tweens, this is well within their capacity. It does mean you will need to allow them internet access. But everything they need is online.
We have a rule in my household that I don't do tech support for my kids with games. I do it for school and required things, but games are something they have to figure out themselves. As a result, they are technically very adept. I'm not rigid about it -- they can ask my opinion of course -- but they have to drive it, not me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am apparently the next to last parent to allow it and trying to figure it out now.
Why is it so effing complicated?
You shouldn't be figuring it out. If your children are interested, they can and should figure it out themselves. As tweens, this is well within their capacity. It does mean you will need to allow them internet access. But everything they need is online.
We have a rule in my household that I don't do tech support for my kids with games. I do it for school and required things, but games are something they have to figure out themselves. As a result, they are technically very adept. I'm not rigid about it -- they can ask my opinion of course -- but they have to drive it, not me.
Anonymous wrote:I am apparently the next to last parent to allow it and trying to figure it out now.
Why is it so effing complicated?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11 year old DS says that playing on PC with the Minecraft Java edition is the best for social gaming.
That’s what my 12 year old says. Playing on iPad is apparently limiting and you can’t create as much. If you want a closed circuit for just them, you can host a server for like $10/month that your kid can administer—basically meaning you give them authority to decide who can be in the virtual room, invite specific people and kick out had actors. My kid repeatedly suspended privileges for her younger cousin because he kept blowing up stuff people built.
Anonymous wrote:11 year old DS says that playing on PC with the Minecraft Java edition is the best for social gaming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless they were at a friend's house pre-pandemic, my kids have never played video games online. They've played plenty of video games by themselves, and with each other, and with their cousins that they podded with through the pandemic, but nothing that's involved the internet. This wasn't a philosophical decision, we just never got around to figuring it out.
Anyway, cousins are moving away, after a year of nonstop togetherness, and so my SIL and I are thinking that we might get them Minecraft as a way for them to still see each other.
But I don't know anything. What do I need to do to get this going? What platform should they play on. Does iPad work well, or do we need something else?
It's available on all platforms. Ipads, Iphones, xbox, pc.
Anonymous wrote:Unless they were at a friend's house pre-pandemic, my kids have never played video games online. They've played plenty of video games by themselves, and with each other, and with their cousins that they podded with through the pandemic, but nothing that's involved the internet. This wasn't a philosophical decision, we just never got around to figuring it out.
Anyway, cousins are moving away, after a year of nonstop togetherness, and so my SIL and I are thinking that we might get them Minecraft as a way for them to still see each other.
But I don't know anything. What do I need to do to get this going? What platform should they play on. Does iPad work well, or do we need something else?