Minecraft Earth will be available without an invite for the first time in October, Microsoft has announced at Minecon. We expect the UK to be among the countries in the game’s first first wave, and Microsoft projects the entire planet will able to play by the end of the year.
But don’t expect to be able to plonk down your Minecraft builds for others to view publicly – at least not for the foreseeable future.
Speaking to Eurogamer, executive producer Jesse Merriam said Microsoft had looked at active methods of moderating builds – including algorithms to detect, er, inappropriate material. But it has proven a difficult exercise, and Microsoft has clearly decided to take a safer-than-sorry approach so players don’t just see a load of blocky penises and swastikas.
“With Minecraft we have the benefit it’s blocky so hard to build something offensive [which algorithms cannot detect] – but we have the disadvantage of Redstone,” Merriam told me. “So, once upon a time, I was getting really complex computer algorithms to analyse the builds, get image recognition in there to see if it was offensive, but with Redstone… you can flip a switch and pistons can move the blocks. So it can look completely unoffensive but there can be a pressure plate which, as soon as you step on it, And so…”
And so, Microsoft has decided, the only public building options will be in Adventures (more on those below). Everything else stays private – and your creations, made on Buildplates – are accessible only to the people you invite.
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“As we interacted with players, we found they really liked the ability to control who could get into Buildplates, rather than make them publicly available,” Merriam told me. “Over time we’ll probably get more configurations to people with those Buildplates, but initially we have it set up so when the owner closes it, it’s gone.”
For Adventures, meanwhile, Microsoft has a report system for anything offensive.
“Oh my gosh, I’ve spent so much of my life talking about that,” Merriam said. “We have already gotten a pretty extensive moderation team which has built moderation functions and we’ve worked out the algorithms so that if someone flags [something in an Adventure] as offensive it is viewable by no-one. We’re having talks now about next steps.”
At launch (where the game will still dubbed as an “Early Access” version), three big new features will be added from the game’s current closed beta: Adventures, Crafting/Smelting, and Challenges.
Adventures are shared space AR vignettes that we previously played at E3. The big difference here is that loot from these is now shared, something done to encourage co-operative defending against monsters and mining of rare resources.
Mincraft Earth ‘Adventure Event’ Gameplay Watch on YouTube
Currently, Adventures can host up to 40 people in an instance. They’ll pop up on the Minecraft Earth map using a clever algorithm designed to populate suitable areas (so, parks and open areas, not railway lines).
Speaking of resources, there’s been a bit of a reshuffle of how you acquire blocks. Tappables, the bits you click on as you walk about in Pokémon Go’s map, will now grant basic blocks only. This is because more complicated blocks can now be crafted or smelt, or found within Adventures too.
“I want those Tappables to be what you find in the first 10 minutes of the game – dirt, oak, cobblestone,” Merriam told me. “For better blocks there are Adventures. And for items you should craft them.
“Everything we do, we grade based on its authenticity. Tappables started out as a dumping ground for every feature which wasn’t finished. But redstone and oak should not be given to a player at the same time! We’re going to get more Minecraft-y about that.”
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Crafting and smelting are new interfaces which work similar to the workbench and furnace in vanilla Minecraft. Pop your resources in, and with a bit of time you can receive a crafted block or item in return.
There’s an option to speed this up using the game’s ruby currency – but this isn’t something Microsoft wants to exploit for money, Merriam told me.
Nether say never…
Vanilla Minecraft may be getting a big Nether update soon, but don’t expect to be travelling through a Nether portal in Minecraft Earth just yet.
In fact, the obsidian blocks needed to create a Nether portal won’t be accessible at all in the launch build – despite players already having acquired them in the beta, where attempts to light them and summon a Nether portal have all ended in failure.
“I pulled Obsidian out [of the launch version] last week, they’re going to be heartbroken,” Merriam said, of people still trying to build Nether frames. “Anyone who has it in the closed beta better start building up their inventories!”
Until the Nether is accessible, obsidian won’t drop at all.
“Water is going to put out lava rather than turn it into Obsidian for a while. That was the discussion, and that we should pull back on it until it does.”
“We haven’t locked in on that – I suspect you’ll be able to speed it up with rubies. Once upon a time we had crafting time take about a day, and now it’s down to minutes. We’re still playing with those knobs.
“I suspect it’ll be similar to what you experience today [in Minecraft vanilla] with the furnace – where you put things in and it takes a few seconds to craft. If you want instant gratification you can have it but we’re really not hiding anything behind a paywall.