This version is vanilla minecraft – there are no mods. There are just so many mods that I can put onto my multiplayer server or single player worlds to customise the game to how I want to play it.īefore getting back into it on the PC, I had a crack at the Xbox 360 version. Recently, I’ve gone back to it with the likes of Tekkit to keep me occupied and I am no where near short of stuff to do with it these days. Sadly, as with the initial launch, my interest left after a while and I stopped playing again. I loved being able to do hugely complex things with Integrated Circuits from CraftBook and huge redstone projects. The mods are really what kept me playing in the end. I then went back to it a few months later when a few friends from college and I started up a server and the mods had begun to trickle through the gaps. I think it’s safe to safe that I had exhausted my supply of pickaxes and shovels. This continued for a few weeks before I stopped playing. I got instantly hooked to it and racked up a bucket load of hours: Mining for diamonds and building a shoddy looking house than no matter how much I did it to it, still looked shoddy. I began playing the PC version in its early beta stages back in early 2011. I’ve had a play through the PC and Xbox 360 versions and here are my conclusions. Notch then founded the company: Mojang who developed the game further and branched it out to smartphones and the Xbox 360 to further their success. This then took off more than the creator Markus ‘Notch’ Persson could have ever imagined, selling (to date) 7 million copies. Minecraft was originally released on the PC in the form of a very early alpha build in May, 2009. Anyway, they created this game called Minecraft. There’s this small company called Mojang, I’m not sure if you’ve heard of them. Articles // 21st Aug 2012 - 11 years ago // By Kris 'Kaostic' West Minecraft: Xbox 360 Edition Vs.
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