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Minecraft: Story Mode
2015 video game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Minecraft: Story Mode is an episodic point-and-click video game developed and published by Telltale Games, based on Mojang Studios' sandbox video game, Minecraft. The first five episodes were released between October 2015 through March 2016 and an additional three episodes were released as downloadable content (DLC) in mid-2016. A second season consisting of five episodes was released in 2017.
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The game follows the same episodic format as other Telltale Games titles, such as The Walking Dead, The Wolf Among Us, Tales from the Borderlands, and Game of Thrones. The story revolves around a player-created character named Jesse, originally an everyman, who later becomes a hero together with their friends. During the first four episodes, Jesse and their friends attempt to reassemble an old group of heroes known as the Order of the Stone to save the Overworld from the destructive Wither Storm. The rest of the first season follows Jesse and their friends, now the new Order of the Stone, on a new adventure after discovering a powerful artifact. In the second season, Jesse faces the powerful Admin.
The game was available for Windows, macOS, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Wii U, Nintendo Switch, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Android, iOS and Apple TV. A retail version was released in December 2016,[12] and the game's first season, excluding the DLC episodes, was released on Netflix in late 2018. However, both seasons of the game were removed from digital storefronts due to the closure of Telltale Games in late 2018, causing the game to be ultimately discontinued on June 25, 2019.[13] The Netflix release of the game was removed on December 5, 2022.[14][15]
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Gameplay
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Minecraft: Story Mode is an episodic interactive comedy-drama point-and-click graphic adventure video game. It was released as a number of episodes similar to Telltale Games' other games. Players can collect items, solve puzzles, and talk to non-player characters through conversation trees to learn about the story and determine what to do next. Decisions that the player makes affect events in both the current episode and later episodes.[16] However, Minecraft: Story Mode is intended to be a family-friendly title, unlike Telltale's previous games, which tend to carry more mature or emotional overtones (including the death of major characters). As such, the decisions are intended to be pivotal and emotional but not to involve mature imagery or themes.[16] Elements of crafting and building were included in the gameplay which are central to Minecraft.[16][17] The game includes combat and other action sequences, carried out through both quick time events and more arcade-like controls, such as steering around debris on a road.[17][18] The Netflix version of the first season (excluding the Adventure Pass episodes) was fully pre-rendered, using an enhanced version of the Telltale Tool, uses limited choices and the second version of male and female models, and re-created as an interactive series.
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Synopsis
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Setting
Minecraft: Story Mode takes place in an interpretation of the world of Minecraft, known as the "Overworld", where the game is the extent of the characters' universe, and the characters are unaware that they are in a game.[19] The main character, Jesse, is an inexperienced resident of said universe who sets out on a journey with their friends within the world of Minecraft to find The Order of the Stone (Gabriel the Warrior, Ellegaard the Redstone Engineer, Magnus the Rogue, Soren the Architect and Ivor the Potion Brewer and Enchanter), five legendary adventurers who saved the Minecraft world.[20] The game includes settings that are normally difficult to access from within Minecraft, including the Nether and The End.[20]
Characters
The player can customize Jesse, including choice of gender and skin tone. Jesse is voiced by Patton Oswalt if male and by Catherine Taber if female.[21] Other main characters within the Minecraft: Story Mode world include Jesse's friends Petra (voiced by Ashley Johnson),[17] Axel (Brian Posehn), Olivia (Martha Plimpton, Natasha Loring), Lukas (Scott Porter), and Jesse's pet pig, Reuben (Dee Bradley Baker). The first season features several characters in supporting roles, including the Order of the Stone—Gabriel (Dave Fennoy), Magnus (Corey Feldman), Ellegaard (Grey Griffin), Soren (John Hodgman) and Ivor (Paul Reubens), the latter of whom becomes a main character from episode five onwards—former Ocelot member and Blaze Rods leader Aiden (Matthew Mercer); the ruler of Sky City, the Founder (Melissa Hutchison); Milo (Jim Meskimen), the leader of an underground building club; Minecraft YouTubers CaptainSparklez, DanTDM, LDShadowLady, Stampy Cat and Stacy Plays (all played by themselves); Torque Dawg (Adam Harrington); Cassie Rose/The White Pumpkin (Ashly Burch with a disguised voice by Roger L. Jackson); the super-computer PAMA (Jason 'jtop' Topolski); its creator and former Old Builder Harper (Yvette Nicole Brown); the warrior Emily (Audrey Wasilewski); and the Old Builders—Hadrian (Jim Cummings), Mevia (Kari Wahlgren) and Otto (Jamie Alcroft). Season 2 adds several more, such as Jesse's assistant Radar (Yuri Lowenthal), the famous hero Jack (Fred Tatasciore) and his villager sidekick Nurm (Mark Barbolak), Champion City ruler Stella (Ashley Albert) and her treasure sniffing llama Lluna, and the sinister Admin named Romeo (JB Blanc).
There are also several background characters, such as Maya, Ivy and a Fangirl (GK Bowes); Owen (Owen Hill); Gill (Phil LaMarr); an EnderCon Usher named Reuben (also Jason 'jtop' Topolski); a Fanboy (Billy West); Lydia (Lydia Winters); and the EnderCon Building Competition Announcer (Erin Yvette). Stauffer said that the human characters as a whole represent the different types of gamers who play Minecraft.[20] Billy West narrates the first four episodes of the story.[22][23][24]
Plot
![]() | This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (November 2022) |
![]() | This section provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. (November 2022) |
This is a broad overview of the plot. Certain decisions made by the player will alter the details of specific events.
Season 1 (2015–16)
In a flashback, the Order of the Stone, consisting of Gabriel, Soren, Ivor, Ellegaard, and Magnus, defeats the Ender Dragon. In the present day, Jesse, his friends Axel and Olivia, and his pet pig Reuben prepare for the EnderCon building competition. The Ocelots, a rival team, attempt to sabotage their build, spooking Reuben. Jesse is attacked rescuing him but Petra saves them, who convinces Jesse to help her sell a Wither skull. The buyer, Ivor, tricks them and escapes with it. They pursue him and discover that Ivor plans to attack Gabriel using a Wither Storm. The group tries to stop it, but are unsuccessful. After recruiting Magnus and Ellegaard, they then head to Soren's lab, hoping that his Formidi-Bomb can destroy the Wither Storm, which Jesse uses, although either Magnus or Ellegaard dies in the process. However, the beast reforms in three clusters. The group, joined by Gabriel or Petra, escape. After that, Ivor takes the group to his lab to enchant a weapon which can destroy the Command Block. Jesse builds the enchanted weapon and destroys the command block, ultimately killing the Wither Storm, but not before the beast kills Reuben.
Soon after, the group finds an enchanted Flint and Steel, which Ivor reveals that the "Old Builders" created it and supposedly the "Eversource", a chicken that lays spawn eggs. Jesse, Ivor, Lukas, and Petra return to the temple and open a portal, leading them to Sky City. The group eventually finds the Eversource, but Aiden, the leader of a rival group called the Blaze Rods, steals it. Jesse defeats Aiden, who is imprisoned in the new Sky City.
Jesse's group retrieve the Flint and Steel and try to return home through another portal, but find themselves in a portal-filled corridor. While travelling between them, they arrive in a graveyard with an invite to a supposed party in a nearby mansion, in which they meet others who were lured into it, among them Cassie Rose. After three of the attendees are killed by traps, the group discovers that the culprit is Cassie, who is then imprisoned in her own trap.
Jesse and their companions meet the computer PAMA, which has the ability to put Redstone Mind-Control Chips on mobs and humans, which are put on Petra and Lukas. Jesse and Ivor escape from with aid by Harper, the scientist who created PAMA. She takes them to her lab to retrieve something to deactivate PAMA, where Jesse frees either Lukas or Petra from PAMA's control before Harper gets kidnapped. After finding Harper's headset (which allows the user to control PAMA's forces), Harper directs Jesse to PAMA's core and tells them to remove the block powering PAMA: the Redstone Heart, before she is captured and chipped. Using this information, Jesse infiltrates PAMA's core and deactivates three of its processing towers (Harper being freed from PAMA's control after destroying the third). After ripping out the heart, Jesse frees Petra/Lukas and the rest of the citizens under PAMA's control.
Back in the portal corridor, Harper reveals the Atlas which can help Jesse's group return home. The Old Builders, consisting of Hadrian, Mevia, and Otto, imprison Jesse and force him to compete in games to win his friends' freedom, but Jesse makes a deal with Otto to free his friends, before battling and defeating Hadrian and Mevia with the aid of Harper and the other imprisoned fighters, allowing them and the group to return home.
Season 2 (2017)
While adventuring with Petra, Jesse, now the mayor of Beacontown, encounters a bottomless pit with a mysterious Prismarine gauntlet inside, which attaches to Jesse's hand. They are joined by Jack and his villager friend Nurm to an ocean monument, which they narrowly escape. Jesse closes up the pit, and the Admin, appearing as a Prismarine Colossus, tracks them to Beacontown. Jesse defeats the Admin, who returns as a snowman. The Admin challenges Jesse and their friends - joined by their new intern Radar, Stella, the leader of rival town Champion City, and Lluna, her pet llama - to retrieve a giant clock at his ice palace. After tackling the challenges and destroying the clock, Vos, Jack's supposed old friend, reveals himself to be the Admin the whole time, and imprisons Jesse and their friends at the Sunshine Institute. After saving Xara, one of the former Admins, and escaping the Institute, the group heads below the bedrock to the Oasis, her old town. Xara reveals that the Admin's real name is Romeo, and that there was a third Admin, Fred, who, prior to his death, created a weapon powerful enough to strip Romeo of his powers. After helping the people of the Oasis, Jesse, Petra and Jack head back up in preparation to fight Romeo. As a show of power to the residents of Beacontown, Romeo, who has impersonated Jesse, either destroys Champion City, or if Jesse had not given Xara her bed at the Oasis, strangles her to death when she attempts to attack him. Romeo begins to cover the world in bedrock, the group arrives at the "Terminal Space", the home of the Admin, where Jesse obtains Fred's gauntlet. Jesse fights Romeo, and strips him of his powers. Jesse can either leave Romeo for dead or take him for redemption; if they had left Fred's people for dead, Romeo would distract the monsters in Terminal Space, allowing Jesse and their friends to escape at the cost of his own life. With Nurm or Lluna saved from the Sunshine Institute, and if Jesse chose to save Fred's people, Radar returning from the Oasis, Jesse can either stay as mayor of Beacontown, or leave, potentially leaving Radar as mayor, to go on adventures with Petra.
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Episodes
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Season 1 (2015–16)
The main Minecraft: Story Mode game was separated into five episodes for its first season, released in one month intervals. Three additional episodes were later released.
Season 2 (2017)
In July 2017, the first trailer was released for the second season, along with a release date of July 11.[25]
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Development and releases
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The idea for Minecraft: Story Mode came around the end of 2012 when Telltale Games was engaged in work for Tales from the Borderlands, an episodic series based on the Borderlands series. The idea of developing stories around other established video game franchises led the team to brainstorm the idea for a Minecraft-related game, given that the game was essentially a "blank canvas" for storytelling, according to Job Stauffer, and would create an interesting challenge.[16] The two groups recognized the amount of fan-generated narrative content that existed in the way of YouTube videos and other media forms that demonstrated the potential for storytelling in the game.[28] Many on Telltale's staff were also already fans of Minecraft, with a private server that they played on, with some of the incidents that occurred on there becoming ideas for the game's story.[28] Telltale began negotiations with Mojang in early 2013 and began work on the title shortly thereafter.[16] Stauffer noted that Microsoft's acquisition of Mojang was not a factor in the game's development, as their interaction with Mojang began well before Microsoft's negotiations.[16]
Telltale opted to create a new main character of Jesse for Minecraft: Story Mode instead of using default "Steve" character from Minecraft, feeling that they did not want to attempt to rewrite how players already saw this character in the game.[29] Other primary characters in the game are loosely designed around archetypes of common player-characters for Minecraft, such that those that engage in building, fighting, or griefing other players.[28] The game did not attempt to provide any background for some concepts in Minecraft, such as the creepers, as to avoid the various interpretations that fans have done for these elements, though they are elements of the game's story.[28]
Stauffer stated that the game's story would be aimed as family-friendly, similar to the films The Goonies or Ghostbusters;[16] their intended content would be equivalent to a PG-13 or PEGI-12 rating.[20][28] A number of the voice actors are alumni of such films of the 1980s such as Corey Feldman who starred in The Goonies, and the game includes various references to these types of films.[28] Stauffer reflected that while Telltale's more recent games like The Walking Dead were more mature stories, their original adventure games like Sam & Max and Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People were written as family-friendly, and that they consider their approach to Minecraft: Story Mode as "part of our DNA".[18] The story was aimed to be accessible to both existing players of Minecraft – both novice and advanced players – and to new audiences outside of the game.[16]
Minecraft: Story Mode was formally announced in December 2014 as a collaboration project between Mojang and Telltale; the announcement was presented as an interactive adventure game named "Info Quest II".[30] Its first trailer was released during the Minecon 2015 convention in early July.[22] The game was planned for a five-episode series for release on Android, iOS, Windows, OS X, PlayStation and Xbox consoles in late 2015;[31][32] Telltale also released the game for the Wii U, only a month after the original Minecraft first came to a Nintendo platform.[33] It was also the first time a Telltale title had been released on a Nintendo platform since Back to the Future: The Game.[16] In addition, Minecraft: Story Mode – The Complete Adventure, incorporating both the main episodes and downloadable content, was announced for the Nintendo Switch.[34]
The series released for most systems on October 13, 2015, with the PlayStation Vita and Wii U versions to follow at a later date. A season pass of the game was available for purchase on October 27, 2015, which allows the player to access the other four episodes once they are released.[2] Retail versions of the game were released on October 27, 2015.[3]
Netflix and Telltale signed a partnership in June 2018 for Netflix to offer Telltale's games over the service starting later that year, with Minecraft: Story Mode as the first planned title for the service.[35] Amid troubles related to the bankruptcy of Telltale Games in October and November 2018, sufficient staff remained with Telltale to complete work on this version, which was released onto Netflix on November 27 and December 5, 2018.[36] It was removed on December 5, 2022.[37]
Season 2
The first episode of Minecraft: Story Mode – Season Two was released on July 11, 2017, for Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, iOS and Android. It continued the story from the first season, with the player's choices affecting elements within Season Two. Patton Oswalt, Catherine Taber, Ashley Johnson, and Scott Porter were confirmed to continue voicework for the new season. The game supports the new Crowd Play feature that Telltale introduced in Batman: The Telltale Series, allowing up to 2,000 audience members to vote on decisions for the player using Twitch or other streaming services.[38]
On August 3, 2017, Telltale announced that the second episode, "Giant Consequences", would be released on August 15.[27] The rest of the episodes were released on September 19, November 7,[39] and December 19, 2017.[40]
Closure of Telltale Games
In November 2018, Telltale Games began the process of closing down the studio due to financial issues. Most of its games started to become delisted from digital storefronts, including Minecraft: Story Mode. According to GOG.com, they had to pull the title due to "expiring licensing rights".[41] The Minecraft team stated that even for those that had purchased the titles before their delisting, the episodes would no longer be downloadable after June 2019.[42] Because the Xbox Live Marketplace does not allow for removing games from sale while at the same time allowing existing owners to download the game, each episode of the game's Xbox 360 version was repriced to $100 in the few weeks ahead of the delisting to deter users from purchasing them.[43]
Following the closure of Telltale, Antimo, one of the game's composers, has stated that there is currently legal confusion as to where the rights to the soundtrack lies, leading to the soundtrack only being available for streaming on SoundCloud and YouTube, where they were released before the closure of Telltale.[citation needed]
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Soundtrack
Minecraft: Story Mode features an original soundtrack composed by American duo Antimo & Welles, consisting of Skyler Barto (Antimo) and Andrew Arcadi (Welles). The soundtrack for the first season consists of 42 tracks, while the soundtrack for the second season has 51 tracks. On December 21, 2018, during the closure of Telltale, the duo released Story Mode Archives, an album consisting of 18 unused tracks from the game. Several more tracks were re-released in late 2021.
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Reception
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Minecraft: Story Mode received "mixed or average reviews" from critics, with the Nintendo Switch version earning a weighted average of 67 based on 5 critics.[77]
Season 1 (2015–16)
Episode 1: The Order of the Stone
Aggregating review website Metacritic gave the Windows version 71/100 based on 25 reviews,[44] the PlayStation 4 version 71/100 based on 23 reviews[45] and the Xbox One version 77/100 based on 13 reviews.[46] On GameRankings, a score of 78.59% was given based on 11 reviews for the Xbox One version,[78] 77.50% for Wii U based on 4 reviews,[79] 73.53% for the PC version based on 16 reviews,[80] and 73.29% for PlayStation 4 based on 21 reviews.[81]
Episode 2: Assembly Required
Metacritic gave the Windows version 59/100 based on 13 reviews,[47] the PlayStation 4 version 53/100 based on 7 reviews[48] and the Xbox One version 61/100 based on 8 reviews.[49]
Episode 3: The Last Place You Look
Metacritic gave the Windows version 73/100 based on 10 reviews,[50] the PlayStation 4 version 73/100 based on 7 reviews[51] and the Xbox One version 75/100 based on 9 reviews.[52]
Episode 4: A Block and a Hard Place
Metacritic gave the Windows version 68/100 based on 8 reviews,[53] the PlayStation 4 version 72/100 based on 8 reviews[54] and the Xbox One version 71/100 based on 8 reviews.[55]
Episode 5: Order Up!
Metacritic gave the Windows version 70/100 based on 6 reviews,[56] the PlayStation 4 version 72/100 based on 9 reviews[57] and the Xbox One version 69/100 based on 6 reviews.[58]
Episode 6: A Portal to Mystery
Metacritic gave the Windows version 64/100 based on 5 reviews,[59] the PlayStation 4 version 69/100 based on 6 reviews[60] and the Xbox One version 71/100 based on 5 reviews.[61]
Episode 7: Access Denied
Metacritic gave the Windows version 69/100 based on 4 reviews,[62] the PlayStation 4 version 68/100 based on 6 reviews[63] and the Xbox One version 71/100 based on 5 reviews.[64]
Episode 8: A Journey's End?
Metacritic gave the PlayStation 4 version 69/100 based on 6 reviews.[65]
Season 2 (2017)
Episode 1: Hero in Residence
Metacritic gave the PC version 71/100 based on 8 reviews,[66] the PlayStation 4 version 67/100 based on 8 reviews,[67] and the Xbox One version 76/100 based on 4 reviews.[68]
Episode 2: Giant Consequences
Metacritic gave the PC version 74/100 based on 8 critics and[82] the PlayStation 4 version a score of 73/100 based on 4 reviews.[83] On GameRankings, the PlayStation 4 version has a rating of 65.00% based on 2 reviews and on the PC version, it has a score of 72.86% based on 7 reviews.[84][85]
Episode 3: Jailhouse Block
Metacritic gave the PC version 71/100, based on 8 reviews, and the PlayStation 4 63/100 based on 4 reviews.[86][87]
Episode 4: Below the Bedrock
Metacritic gave the PC version a score of 74/100 based on 5 critics.[88]
Episode 5: Above and Beyond
Metacritic gave the PC version a score of 78/100 based on 4 critics.[76]
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References
External links
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