10 Minecraft Clones That Aren’t Actually Minecraft Clones
There are few descriptors in the modern gaming press as common and as unhelpful as referring to something as a ‘Minecraft clone’. Invoking Minecraft is an easy and SEO-friendly way to get most of your readers on the same page, but it’s just not as helpful as it once was. Voxel and low-poly aesthetics are increasingly common, while crafting and resource-gathering mechanics are making their way into more and more games across a variety of genres. More to the point Minecraft may have helped popularize (or re-popularize) some these things but it hardly invented them. And still, Minecraft remains the unnecessary short-hand comparison for a lot of games that could easily stand on their own. Case in point…
1. Ace of Spades
“It’s Minecraft but with guns.” If no one’s told you that exact line about Ace of Spades before now, then it may be a conclusion you’ll arrive at on your own based on a single glance at any given screenshot. Melee weapons, magic and archery are far and away the most popular weapons among these kinds of games, so frankly the fact that guns aren’t just included but are a major focus of Ace of Spades is enough to distinguish it.
2. Terraria
The common refrain about Terraria, especially before it truly made a name for itself, was “Oh, it’s 2D Minecraft!” Well… That’s not quite the case. 2D Minecraft (which can be accomplished with a clever mod, naturally) is 2D Minecraft, and Terraria is a whole other beast. It has a ridiculously diverse and interesting arsenal of tools, weapons, and equipment for players to experiment with, not to mention multiple bosses and different world phases that can be triggered when you beat them. Minecraft is downright simplistic in comparison.
3. Starbound
“It’s 2D Minecraft… In space!” Can you understand why I am so sick of people comparing things to Minecraft yet? Starbound definitely takes a few pages from Terraria (and has a few developers in common) but, while Terraria tends to feel more combat- and resource-focused, the biggest joy in Starbound comes from exploration. Rather than limiting players to a single world seed, the ability to essentially hop from seed to seed is woven into a mechanic of space travel. This makes it easier to share coordinates when you stumble across something particularly cool, and also means it doesn’t require 10 minutes of jogging in one direction if you get a little bored with your current base and want a change of scenery.
4. Unturned