minecraft
2011 Game of the Year Awards
Announcing the 2011 Game of the Year Awards from First Hour!
These aren't your normal awards, we cover everything from older game of the year to worst first hour. We also don't sum up votes on categories or anything either, we simply present each writer's thoughts on their pick, so if you don't like something, you know exactly who to blame! Of course, we do all this just for fun (spare time!) and buy all of our own games (real money!), so most of us don't even touch some of the big releases of the year. Woe to the unpaid game critic!
Minecraft
Initially, Humble Indie Bundle 3 was only five videogames for
whatever price you deemed worthy: Crayon Physics Deluxe, Cogs, VVVVVV,
And Yet It Moves, and Hammerfight. After a day or two, a free pass for
Markus “Notch” Persson's Minecraft was added, allowing HIB3 buyers to
play the blocks-laden indie game until August 14, 2011. This might have
had something to do with the fact that Notch was/is one of the top
contributors to the cause, dropping well over $4,000 for a handful of
games he surely already owns. But it's easy to figure out why he'd
support indie games like so, and giving the wary a free looksie into his
own thriving title is a smart decision.
For some time now, I've been interested in Minecraft. Take note that I did not say interested in playing Minecraft, as the two statements are actually very different. Just interested. From the outside, it looks like a creative, germinal, easy-to-play game that is just asking you to open it up and go nuts. Plus, y'know, I grew up on Lego blocks. It's just plain ol' nature here, stacking and breaking blocks galore and building crazy fortresses loaded from ceiling to cellar with booby-traps. However, Minecraft could also share the same problems many other open-world games have, where there is ultimately little purpose.
At E3 2011, it was announced that Minecraft was coming to the Xbox 360, my preferred gaming console. For now, I'll be giving the game a swing on my Macbook, and hopefully it can handle everything. It's struggled to run other games from Humble Indie Bundle 3 (and previous iterations). I am and always will be a console gamer though so if I do enjoy my time here, I'll more than likely download it from Xbox Live Arcade whenever it becomes available.
