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This article is about the Pocket Edition. For the Xbox 360 Edition, see Xbox Edition. For PC version, see Minecraft.

Minecraft Pocket Edition[2] is the mobile version of Minecraft developed by Aron Nieminen of Mojang AB. It was initially launched exclusively for the Xperia PLAY on the Android Market[3] for $6.99/£4.28/4.99€ on August 16, 2011, along with a free demo version. It was later released for other Android devices on the 7th of October 2011.[4] Minecraft Pocket Edition for iOS devices was released on Thursday, the 17th of November 2011[5] on the iOS App Store, one day before the launch of Minecraft 1.0 at MineCon and currently costs $6.99 US.

About

The objective of the game remains the same as its original Computer and Xbox Edition counterparts, where players can build virtual realities in a sandbox-like environment. The multiplayer mode is cross-platform compatible between Android and iOS.[6]

A video of an early prototype was released on Twitter,[7] showing the game on the Xperia PLAY. The alpha version was recently released, and became no longer exclusive to the Xperia PLAY on the 7th of October 2011. The non-exclusive version was going to be released on September 29th for Android[8] but there were several severe bugs that needed to be fixed; the release was delayed until the 7th of October.

A version for iOS devices was confirmed to be released before 2012 in an interview with Mojang[9] and subsequently was released on the 17th of November 2011.

Mojang has confirmed that Survival Mode will be next on the development list. The next version will be released February 8 for submission to Apple and Android stores for approval [10]

Gameplay

Both the iOS and Android versions of Pocket Edition have the same gameplay,[11] which is akin to that of the Classic game mode, with the following differences:


Controls

Main article: Controls

Android version

The Android version features a d-pad at the bottom-left corner of the screen, which controls movement. The jump button is located in the center of the d-pad. Note that when moving towards an adjacent block that is one level higher than the Player, the player will automatically jump up the block. One can place blocks by tapping the screen in a desired location. Destroying blocks is similar to the PC version's way, but rather than tapping, the player taps and holds. The search button used to be able to change the camera to and from Third Person View, but now this has to be done via the pause screen, and the menu and back buttons will open the pause screen. To open the inventory screen, tap the triple dotted button on the right of the hot bar.

Xperia PLAY

  • Controlled with slide out PlayStation keyboard:

Cross: Jump

Circle: Cycle inventory right

Square: Cycle inventory left

Triangle: Bring up inventory

D-Pad: Move

Right Touchpad: Look/Turn

Menu: Pause

iOS version

The controls on iOS are very similar to the Android version with the exception of the search and back buttons. To open the pause screen you must press the three dot button then click 'Menu' in the top left corner. To switch to Third Person View you open the menu then tap the button with the square with an icon of a player in it.

System Requirements

Android

According to Aron Nieminen, the system requirements are:

  • Android OS 2.2 or later
  • The device must have a CPU that supports floating-point calculations ("ARM-v7a code")
  • The screen must support multi-touch
  • An internet connection is required to download the game

Aron says that the CPU known as "MSM7227" is NOT supported, which unfortunately is in a lot of smartphone models.[12]

According to Kappische, the Pocket Edition won't work with devices that have processor speeds under 1 GHz and Android OS versions lower than 2.2.[13][14]

Though some devices below these specs and OS versions have been known to work fine either with or without using a custom ROM image, kernel, and overclocking the CPU.


Officially verified working Android devices

  • Sony Ericsson Xperia Play[15]
  • Sony Ericsson Xperia Ray[16][17]
  • Sony Ericsson Xperia Mini Pro[17]

A full list of (non)compatible devices and the performance on said devices can be found here.

iOS

The system requirements for the iOS version of Pocket Edition are:

  • An iOS device with iOS 4.3 or newer (Armv7 Only).
  • 2.9 MB of available storage space.

Helpful Hints & Tips

  • Make sure your battery is charged, and/or plugged in (3D gaming drains the battery quickly).
  • Make sure that you downloaded the Pocket Edition from the Android Market or the iOS App Store, and not from a 3rd party (which may include viruses in your download).
  • Get used to the controls before playing on servers (it is easy to mine the block under a torch by mistake).
  • You can't use ladders to make water elevators or underwater bases because water destroys ladders.

Early Prototype build

File:Pocket Edition screenshot.png

An early screenshot of the game.

  • The game looked exactly like the old Classic build on PC (bright green grass/leaves, no birch/pine trees).
  • There were clouds/sky in the game.
  • Inventory hotbar had smaller look and could handle 9 items.
  • Placeable Pumpkin and TNT blocks (TNT was able to explode).
  • Some Wool blocks had colour from the Classic build.
  • The Rose was going to be a block, but it was replaced with the Cyan Flower due to hardware issues.

IPad version

In the iPad version you don't get as much as in the other versions. You get torches, wooden planks, wood, leaves, stone, cobblestone, colored wool, sand, sandstone, dirt, pumpkins and flowers, special materials. There are also many bugs and you can't take screenshots.

iPad bugs

Sugar cane can be placed on water, regardless of what the water is on top of. You can place sugar cane on snow, but if you place a second one next to it the first one will vanish.

Trivia

  • Torches and Lava are the only form of lighting in the Pocket Edition.
  • Only 18/36 Blocks are available in the Pocket Edition Demo version.
  • Pocket Edition's save files are not compatible with those from the PC version.
  • There are no player skins in either version of the Pocket Edition.

You can have skins on the IOS version by replacing char.png in the app file.[18]

  • Fire is still present but is invisible, and can only be seen by placing flammable blocks next to lava.
  • Lava appears to be frozen, but will flow if forced to move.
  • Transparent blocks such as glass or slabs don't appear to be recognized as solid by the auto-jump feature.
  • The auto jump feature doesn't work on leaves if you go from a standing start with fancy graphics on.

Gallery

Version-exclusive Blocks

See also

External links

References

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