Mojang Releases Minecraft: Pi Edition For the Raspberry Pi
hypnosec writes "Mojang has officially released Minecraft: Pi Edition for the credit card sized Raspberry Pi. Back in November, Minecraft was ported to the Raspberry Pi, and it was revealed that Mojang would release a free version of the game. The game is completely free and is now available for download. Even though the game will carry only a limited set of features, the cost and complexity of building and hosting a Minecraft LAN-party has definitely dropped."
From the looks of it, you should be able to run it on any ARM system that can run Debian Wheezy. More generally, the idea of a tiny box you can just turn on and have a server for a bzflag, Quake, etc. tournament is appealing.
How powerful is this device? Can it host a large enough server for less wattage than a normal PC?
Looks like I got my RPi model B just in time!
More memory, more better.
Kriston
I struggle to host 3 people on a mini-ITX Intel Atom system, I can't imagine how poorly this would run a MC server.
I thought this meant your Minecraft session occurred in a boat trapped with a tiger.
"Twice half-assed makes an ass whole." --Solomon K. Chang
I just fired it up on my Pi-B running Wheezy and my experience was the exact opposite. Running full screen it was very smooth, had to be 30 fps or higher. CPU usage was around 85-90%.
Better known as 318230.
I found that it ran just fine for me. Running off of a good quality 4 gig class 4 card. I was using the composite output and frame rate was high enough that it was pretty smooth. I would guess 25-30fps. Idle cpu use was just under 50%, moving around increased it to about 90%, but rarely maxed it out. Connected over the lan from my galaxy nexus running pocket edition. Everything was running pretty smooth on both. Didn't take note of cpu usage at the time, was just kind of running around in game like a dork, excited that it was running so well. I did notice heavy cpu usage when interfacing through the api and doing multiple setblock operations.
Obviously, you're doing something wrong.
Wow, first he learned Linux and I got him a hosted server for MC. Next he was setting up other servers remotely. THen I found him customizing his world via VI editor from his phone. My kid learned so much computer stuff because of MC. I am really excited about this because this is something else he will learn that I may not. I learned what griefing is and how he adapted various methods to protect his world. For me, it was a C64 and cassette tape drive, for him it is the Universe and MineCraft is his hook. This is really cool because it did not have to be done but it was. Talk about doing great community service.
Yeah, it's kind of a joke.
I'm also appalled at how bad the Minecraft server is. It's one resource hungry beast, easily eating through multiple GB for just one or two people playing on a fairly 'vanilla' map without too large a world.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
troll much?
pi@raspberrypi ~/mcpi $ ldd minecraft-pi | grep GL /opt/vc/lib/libGLESv2.so (0x400fa000) /opt/vc/lib/libEGL.so (0x40082000)
libGLESv2.so =>
libEGL.so =>
Cool. Show us your multiplayer server that's better then? Let's just guess that the server is doing a massive amount of caching, because it can.
Also, this isn't based upon the desktop code, but the pocket edition code.
I thought that the RPi came with hardware acceleration for the graphics. Maybe it needs installing, or maybe you have an aversion to binary blobs?
Maybe you should try a lower resolution first before whining. 1600x900 on a 700MHz ARM11, Sheesh, even with GPU acceleration a $5 SoC like the RPi uses would struggle. What is it like at 1280x720? Or in a window? Is there a pixel doubled mode? If the performance improves at lower resolutions, then it's not vertex processing bound, but rendering bound.
Really?
My nephew (aged 11) invites his friends round with their laptops (or, more realistically, their dads' laptops). They all connect to the wireless network and then my nephew runs up the Minecraft server on his parents' main PC. Cost: 0, complexity: very low. Alternatively, he enables port forwarding on the firewall and they don't even need to come over. Cost: 0, complexity: quite low.
I can't see how a reduced featured version of the game on an underpowered (for gaming) platform is going to improve his Minecraft experience in any way.
All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
dunno about minecraft but the thing can run quake 3 pretty well so saying it's only useful for 2d gaming is pretty silly. also the other 2 codecs are mpg2 (dvd encoding) and wmv so they're not really that exciting, i've only got a couple of movies encoded in mpg2 and i can't even remember that last time i saw one in wmv.
This is a joke. I am joking. Joke joke joke.
For what it's worth, it runs fine and smoothly on my Pi at 1920x1080. The op is obviously doing something wrong. You don't even need to install any binary blobs, everything that runs on the CPU is open source. The binary blob is the firmware that gets loaded to the GPU before Linux even starts.
Mada mada dane.
without broadcom releasing any video acceleration the thing is worthless for gaming unless it's 2d.
Minecraft doesn't use video. Maybe you meant 3D acceleration, but you'd still be wrong. Broadcom has even released the specs needed to write driver stubs, which isn't much but it's more than most mobile GPUs provide.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Minecraft is a boring game, and Pi is a overhyped Arduino. Slashdot only posted this article because they get paid to promote stupid shit.
Me...in a word, as a regular reader. Ignoring the fact its nice to not read another article with the constant pissing contests between various mega-corporations supporters *cough*. I own both, Minecraft and the Rasberry Pi, because they are popular, and deservedly so. One a hot [cross platform] inventive indie game, and the other a *THE* hot micro ARM motherboard. Its interesting news.
The Rasberry Pi receives just the right amount of hype, Its backed by a whole host of interesting parties from Google; to Cambridge University to David Braben [yes the elite guy] with the great goal of educating the yoof beyond that of Microsoft Office in computer science...and it is working. It even runs RiscOS :) Debian [hell there are three versions from running XBMC].
I'm sure that the raspberry Pi is not the best hardware; best price; cheapest or even the first..but it is the most supported and popular, not just capturing...but creating a market for small ARM motherboards for education, and achieving this goal driven by purely Altruistic reasoning.
Thanks for that, clearly the OP either has a badly configured Pi, some Pis are cranky, or he is just trolling.
YouTube should be filling up with RPi Minecraft videos right about now that disprove everything he's written anyway.
Isn't MC written in Java? And isn't Java supposed to be platform-independent?
Followup question: Shouldn't it then run on any platform that has a JRE installed?
for myblks in range(10): world.setBlock(1,1,0+myblks,3)
to make a bridge in front of you.
The Raspberry Pi was only ever supposed to be a fun toy for kids to have in their bedrooms, to learn something about computers or electronics. I don't think it was ever pitched as a fire breathing replacement for you i7 gaming rig. That said it is very capable as an XBMC machine ( Raspbmc ) and plays old games like openarena and Quake 3 very nicely.
Ignoring the odd random racist, homophobic etc etc or it being used to promote a mega-corporations agenda by spamming a forum, the most enlightened comments come from anonymous cowards.
"Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth. Oscar Wilde"
I agree completely! When I put my Pi in my wallet, it makes sitting very uncomfortable! I really had to force the wallet to even close! I believe this truly is false advertising.
This space for rent, inquire within.
The length and width dimensions of the pcb are exactly credit card dimensions.
No they aren't (despite the raspberry pi foundation's faq saying for a while they were), the PCB is roughly the same length as a credit card but a couple of mm wider.
Add the connector overhangs and overall the Pi is slightly longer than a credit card, slightly wider than a credit card and MANY MANY times thicker than a credit card.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
check the forums there is even a sticky
there are no 3d acceleration on the pi at all...
there is 1 guy trying to write drivers sorta reverse engineering in one post that is 5 pages long but it keeps crashing when scrolling a browser
but Liz stickied a post that there are no 3d accelerated drivers for X or for anything at the moment.
the only thing that has acceleration is video playback of h264 videos or 2 others if you purchase their licenses and receive a serial/hash to put into the firmware's config.txt on boot which unlocks vc1 and the other video playback
but that's all for now.
it's on the forum and posted by Liz herself there are no accelerated 3d drivers for the pi
and only 1 guy working on reverse engineering it which if successful there's already gossip that broadcom would send him a dmca takedown notice for it
The hydrogen atom isn't even remotely close to Angstrom-sized, especially not when it's cased up. It's closer to the size of a packet of playing cards.
too large a world
you're trolling way off target here. the pocket edition has fixed-sized worlds.
Same for me. Very fast and fluid. Frankly, I was surprised at how well it ran.
there are no 3d acceleration on the pi at all..
if you're going to troll, at least pick something that's not trivial to refute with a simple google search for your statement above which handily returns a small roundup of graphics as the first result.
here's some more (just to illustrate how poor your trolling attempt was):
http://www.raspberrypi.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Architecture-and-Source.png
http://jonmacey.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/getting-started-with-egl-on-raspberry.html
http://nccastaff.bournemouth.ac.uk/jmacey/GraphicsLib/piNGL/index.html
Liz has already stated there is no 3d acceleration for X or any graphic desktop
the only acceleration that WORKS right this moment is video playback of the 3 video codecs the chip allows. x264 being primary.
there are projects in the work to being 3d acceleration desktop enviroment to the PI
BUT NONE EXIST AT THE MOMENT... all those links you posted are in the works, none are finished, none have the support of Broadcom and the RasPI foundation has already stated they WILL NOT release or open source their graphics drivers for 3d acceleration.
there are many projects like you posted that are trying to reverse engineer and bring 3d acceleration to the PI
but sorry all those you posted are only projects, none are finished and none work at this time, there are a few alpha tests but the closest X windows 3d accelerated test was done buy a guy on the forum for LXDE and it's so much in alpha that it works for a little while until you try to click the scroll button on a web browser and it crashes locking up the pi requiring reboot.
stop spreading nonsense. there are projects, but NO current 3d accelerated desktops for the PI and Broadcom has already stated they will not open source or release the code to make it happen, thus the projects to reverse engineer it were born
3d acceleration works just fine on the Pi through OpenGL ES. What isn't there is an accelerated X driver. You can still run 3d applications in X and if they use OpenGL ES, they'll be accelerated but X itself is running in software mode.
Mada mada dane.
Liz has already stated there is no 3d acceleration for X or any graphic desktop
this is correct, but it's not what you claimed above:
there are no 3d acceleration on the pi at all...
this is false. and this is what i quoted above and previously pointed out as being false.
there is 3d acceleration on the pi. there are EGL and GLES drivers. they do work, they're not 'in the works', they are provided by Broadcom. it is possible to write 3d-accelerated software on the pi.
the RasPI foundation has already stated they WILL NOT release or open source their graphics drivers for 3d acceleration
sure. but the fact that those drivers aren't open-source, doesn't mean that they don't exist, nor does it mean that 'there are no 3d acceleration on the pi'.
there are projects in the work to being 3d acceleration desktop enviroment to the PI
sure, but trying to retroactively qualify your troll with 'desktop environment' doesn't change the fact that you stated 'no 3d at all' before. we're not talking about desktop environments (whatever that means), we're talking about 3d acceleration in general. again, the lack of an accelerated X11 driver does NOT mean that there's no 3d acceleration on the pi at all...