author: Radek Wacha
Minecraft. Players show developers how to make games
Table of Contents
Proclaiming Skyrim the king of mods was not so simple. Another pretender to the crown was Minecraft – Dovahkiin so far feels Steve's square breath on his back (by the way, these two titles could also measure up in terms of the number of platforms they've been released on). While the most popular part of The Elder Scrolls is more associated with fan-driven projects than Notch's work, Minecraft has to be given one thing - it has proved incredibly vulnerable to new developments or completely altering gameplay. You want to build a nuclear power plant, program a robot, or go into space? You got it. Or would you rather develop a hero, cast spells, and perform missions in a fantasy world? No problem - a few proper mods will do the trick.
A separate mention goes to the fact that Minecraft mods are very easy to install. Of course, manual installation of a few dozen rewrites will probably end in failure (mod conflicts preventing the game from working), but launchers and modification packs come to the rescue. A few clicks and we're done. Actually, beginning your adventure with a tweaked Minecraft can be even simpler – just visit one of the free servers. We copy, paste the IP address, wait for additional content to be downloaded and after a while, we enjoy the new content.