After my post about a Dad’s Guide to Minecraft, several readers requested (both in the comments below and on Twitter and FB) that I post the 100-foot statue of me that my son Ben made for Father’s Day last year. He even attempted to create a version of me wearing a Rosary Army t-shirt. Here are a few screen shots.
Minecraft makes me feel stupid. If you don’t know what Minecraft is, stop right now and thank the Lord for His intervention in protecting you from this cult-breeding virtual LEGO set video game that bestows upon children the power to create whatever gargantuan constructs they can imagine out of 8-bit digital blocks.
That’s it.
No plot.
You can’t win the game.
You just build.
You can, however, play co-operatively with other players online or on a home network, you can play Minecraft death-match (which I really regret allowing in my house), or you could go full-introvert and dive into the single-player mode to create immersive and pixelated landscapes just so you can look at it and say, “Yep. There’s a pixelated landscape.”
And I honestly can’t get over the fact that this ground-breaking technology that has made the creator millions of dollars looks like the chunky blocky games I used to play on an Atari 2600 over thirty years ago. It’s retro, yet futuristic. It’s Minecraft.
I could have come up with this. But I didn’t. So someone else has made millions of dollars.
Whenever my kids lose twelve hours on a Saturday because they were creating a 500-story refrigerator filled with virtual pixelated bananas in Minecraft, I ask them how that will get them a job so they can move out in ten years. They think I’m kidding.
Last winter I had to temporarily leave my family behind in Atlanta when I got a new job in Denver. I was living in an extended stay hotel and made the regrettable promise to my oldest two Minecraft addicts (who also happen to be my sons) that I would get a Minecraft account so that we could play cooperatively and, in lieu of actual father/son bonding time, we could do so online through Minecraft.
This experience made Minecraft the first video game I’ve ever encountered in my entire life that made me utter the dreaded parental words, “I don’t get it.”
Those words then lead to a ridiculous rant where I might as well have hiked my pants up to my chest, popped on old-man glasses, and declared, “Why, when I was a kid we used to walk to the video arcade in the snow uphill both ways just so we could throw quarters away on games that had purpose – like Pac-man (where you ran around the exact same maze as many times as you could manage without dying) and Donkey Kong (where you navigated through just three repeated constructs as a gorilla threw barrels at you) and Mappy (my personal favorite which hardly anyone else remembers which was about a Police Mouse who avoided criminal cats by slamming doors and jumping on trampolines).”
See, THOSE games had a point! And years later I have a job. Because those games also cost 25-cents each so it was impossible to lose hours at a time playing them. Heck, we could hardly afford to play for more than ten minutes before we needed to go find some work to do to earn some more quarters.
“So what do I do?” I asked my sons via Skype last winter as we played together for the first time from a distance of over 1,400 miles.
“Come over here,” Sam (my oldest) instructed. I navigated my avatar (generically named Steve in the Minecraft world) to follow his character and together we chopped trees. And then we dug holes. And then we chopped trees. And then we dug holes. And apparently both the wood from the trees as well as the dirt from the ground formed some sort of currency that I’d use to “craft” together other minerals and objects. For example, three logs and a pound of dirt would create a pig. Or something like that.
And that’s pretty much Minecraft.
“So how did you do on your tests this week?” I asked my boys. They laughed. Dad is such a cut up.
Here are the other ways Minecraft makes me squirm:
If other people in your home want to play, you need to buy another account for about $30. We’ve bought three of these accounts so far. Nearly $100. For digital LEGO playsets.
If you want to play on mobile devices, you’ll pony up another $7.
In addition to the games, my children also have Minecraft t-shirts, posters and toys. My wife and I paid for those, too.
They’ve recently announced a new service called Minecraft Realms which (if I understand correctly from my children (because I’m not going to go research this)) allows you to have your own personal server hosted on Minecraft’s end. And this will have a monthly charge. Probably per user. I’ve asked my employer about having my 401K transferred to Mojang, the company who makes Minecraft.
When our children aren’t playing Minecraft, they’re watching videos online of other people playing Minecraft. Because playing the game isn’t enough of a time-suck.
So those are the primary negatives for me. But as much as it pains me to admit it, there are some pros to the game, as well. For example:
My kids have made some ridiculously awesome constructs. The Minecraft screenshots in this post are all buildings and arenas my kids made, block by stinkin’ block. My kids. I know, right?
The program encourages a combination of artistry and engineering. Of course, kids can defy all logic and place a random block 45 feet in the air that could hold the entire Empire State Building, but still, the basics of engineering still exist.
It teaches math, geometry, and physics without it seeming like its teaching math, geometry, and physics.
Co-op mode genuinely fosters cooperation. My boys work better when they’re playing Minecraft than if they were left on their own to forage for food.
Minecraft actually has multiple elements that would be good in the classroom, and websites like this one and this one have tons of articles, resources, and videos as to how to make Minecraft an even more educationally beneficial tool. If we were still a homeschooling family, I imagine Minecraft would be a big part of the curriculum.
The single biggest reason my wife and I have allowed it in our house is that the output of Minecraft has been some of the most creative that we’ve seen from our children. Though they spend hours creating things in a digital world that only they and a select few others can enjoy, they’re found a medium for creating. When I was their age, I did that with reams of paper and box loads of pencils. Tools change, and I can’t completely begrudge that fact.
And on a more personal level, when we finally managed to move the entire family across the country to join me in Denver, Minecraft not only allowed our boys to remain connected to their friends back east (as it continues to do so almost a year later), but helped them foster strong friendships here, as well.
Though I wish my kids would exercise more, read more, pray more, do their chores more promptly, cooperate as well in real life as they do online, and engage in more of the things I did when I was their age, Minecraft has inspired my boys to build a 100-foot statue of me for Father’s Day, create technically complex infinity roller coasters, and learn how to catapult chickens long distances.
And perhaps these skills developed in an 8-bit world (particularly the chicken tossing one) will indeed help them get jobs creating buildings, designing cities, or leading communities in the future.
Probably not. But I’ll keep praying that it works out that way.
PG-13 Trivia, Another Teen in the House, Minecraft, Making Advent Holy, Dieting Woes, T-Shirts, and More!
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