D&D (2024) D&D Meets Minecraft

The lead announcement from today's D&D Direct presentation is a collaboration between Dungeons & Dragons and Minecraft, releasing this spring. Tom Sargent, senior producer at Wizards of Coast, said it's set in Forgotten Realms and that they're “...two amazing properties that work well together.”

The lead announcement from today's D&D Direct presentation is a collaboration between Dungeons & Dragons and Minecraft, releasing this spring. Tom Sargent, senior producer at Wizards of Coast, said it's set in Forgotten Realms and that they're “...two amazing properties that work well together.”

Minecraft DnD logo.PNG


At a press preview held yesterday, Riccardo Lenzi, senior producer for Mojang Studios, explained that the game begins with figures at a table with a dungeon master. Players will pick their character from a fighter, cleric, rogue, or wizard, and then enter the world of Forgotten Realms.

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“Knowing that Minecraft has such a broad age range, we wanted to stick with core D&D because it might be someone's first exposure to D&D or it might be someone familiar with D&D,” said Sargent.

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Lenzi and Sargent explained that Minecraft D&D is a full videogame story, and it's the first Minecraft licensed DLC with voiceovers. It also has full music to make the battle scenes more epic, but it's not all fighting. Exploration is also be part of the game, but it's not a full open world. The estimated first play-through takes about 10 hours. You can play on your own or with friends.

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There's no connection between this DLC and core Minecraft, in part because of the various components. For example, Minecraft D&D has dynamic music and a battle soundtrack commissioned specifically for this box. Minecraft D&D also has a robust menu system and a quest log. And, because this is D&D, there are dice rolls that determine success or failure.

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So Minecraft D&D uses the Minecraft engine, but a mimic can't be ported over to main Minecraft. People also can't use D&D assets for their own builds. It “stays in the box” as Sargent said, because of how it's pushing the limits of the Minecraft Engine. However, each class has skins and those can be used outside the Minecraft D&D box.

Minecraft Dungeons & Dragons will be available on all platforms Minecraft is currently using. That said, Lenzi noted that with the way it pushes the Minecraft engine it might not be perfect if played on an old phone, for example.

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If you're not a Minecraft player, the crossover still has something for tabletop players. Dan Dillion, game designer at Wizards of the Coast gave us a preview yesterday of Monstrous Compendium Volume 3: Minecraft. Available today as a no-cost download on D&D Beyond and Minecraft's website, it translates Minecraft creatures such as Creepers, Ender Dragons, and Endermen into D&D stat blocks that can be added to your campaign however you wish.

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Download Monstrous Compendium 3: Minecraft at minecraft.net or dndbeyond.com.
 

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Beth Rimmels

Beth Rimmels

Levistus's_Leviathan

5e Freelancer
WTF did I see? Like can someone else explain the appeal of Minecraft, I've seen 80's video games that look better, I mean its all blocky and stuff. What am I missing that is so popular?
Don't badmouth Minecraft before you play it. The blocky, pixelated nature of the game is a part of its charm and timelessness. The selling point of the game is that you can explore a practically infinite fantasy world, build anything, and fight against monsters while you harvest your environment's resources.
 

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Don't badmouth Minecraft before you play it. The blocky, pixelated nature of the game is a part of its charm and timelessness. The selling point of the game is that you can explore a practically infinite fantasy world, build anything, and fight against monsters while you harvest your environment's resources.
I don't find extremely bad graphics in a modern game charming. The rest of that would be cool if the graphics weren't so terrible.
 


mellored

Legend
I don't find extremely bad graphics in a modern game charming. The rest of that would be cool if the graphics weren't so terrible.
What your missing is that you can mine those blocks, move them to somewhere else, and then craft new things with them.

It's a 3d grid (i.e. blocks) that allows you to build whatever you want.

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And that's before you get into red stones, which allow you to make logical paths.

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Mecheon

Sacabambaspis
WTF did I see? Like can someone else explain the appeal of Minecraft, I've seen 80's video games that look better, I mean its all blocky and stuff. What am I missing that is so popular?
Its the chill vibes and the gameplay loop

Okay so firstly, understand with video games 'looking good' is something people don't care the most about. The thing is moreso artistically fitting, and Minecraft has just, always had that art style as its thing. Frankly I prefer the blocky stuff much before the "Someone has just dumped a high quality car model into Minecraft", even if technically the car model is high quality, it just doesn't look right in the overall world. Yeah, I'm calling out popular Minecraft/Pokemon mod Pixelmon and just saying the blocky moodels were better.

The gameplay loop in Minecraft is simple but rewarding. Punch tree, get wood. Use wood to make items. Use those items to harvest more things. Use those items to then make more things to expand your exploration and gathering. Break asunder the barriers between realms because The Nether has glowstone (for functional lamps), quartz (for fancy buildings), but also blaze rods. You need the blaze rods to combine with ender pearls to crack open another cross dimensional portal to kill the Ender Dragon so you can loot the End for its resources and. most importantly, get the Elytra and basically fly. But like.... You don't need to do any of that. You can just, cross the world and harvest every sapling and make a giant tree. Or just move into a village and defend it against zombie hordes. Or just program Doom into the game, because Doom runs on everything. You just, sort of can do what you want and its what you make of it

and then you get mods involved and next thing you know I'm running Jurassic Park but also making deals with Fey Kings for resources we each can't get, with multiple dimensions at my beck and call, alongside both a functional nuclear reactor and a space station
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
WTF did I see? Like can someone else explain the appeal of Minecraft, I've seen 80's video games that look better, I mean its all blocky and stuff. What am I missing that is so popular?
Graphics aren't everything, gameplay is what sells. Minecraft eschews graphics to free up computing power for simulating complex systems...and people play for the complex but fun systems.
 

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