Game developer Robots and Pencils have been getting lots of attention lately, much of it in the form of hate mail.
The developer recently released Minecraft World Explorer for the iPhone and iPad, an unofficial app that allows gamers to explore the worlds they create in the incredible popular computer game Minecraft.
It sells for $3, and fans of the computer game arenāt happy, at least not until they talk to Robots and Pencils co-founder Michael Sikorsky.
āIāve emailed everyone that has asked, and most of them have turned into supporters and are now on our ad hoc beta program,ā Sikorsky said. āOnce people realized weāre a world explorer versus something like āsurvival modeā it all makes sense to them.ā
The difference between the two is the difference between playing a game and visiting a world created by that game.
In MineCraft you wake in a wondrous land of block art and exploration. Most first visits to the game start with a player digging holes and using that material to create tiny little forts. They often end that night, when the Creepers come to visit and explode the fort.
Minecraft World Explorer is MineCraft without the threat of enemies or the joy of survival. Itās a program that allows you to visit the by-product of your in-game hardwork but not really impact it.
While you can, if you can get the programās slightly confusing web site to work, import and export worlds, these worlds arenāt persistent in the gameās popular survival mode. Future iterations of the iPhone and iPad app will allow you to import and export your āclassic modeā creations via iTunes File Sync, Sikorsky said.
Even though the explorer is essentially a level editor, it certainly relies on the aesthetic of MineCraft and the buzz surrounding the PC and Mac title for its sales.
But Sikorsky says that MineCraft developer Mojang is aware of the program and is mostly unbothered by it.
āI think theyāre a few things they want us to change and weāre talking with them right now about that,ā he said. āBut, I donāt want to speak for them.ā
Weāve reached out to Markus āNotchā Persson, founder of Mojang, and the gameās developers seeking comment and confirmation, but havenāt heard back yet.
On the MineCraft website, Persson writes that āplugins for the gameā belong to the person who created them and that they can even be sold.
āWe have a huge amount of respect for (Persson),ā Sikorsky said. āWeāve talked to Mojang and love their company, but they want it to be clear that this wasnāt developed by them. Weāre just part of the eco-system but thatās about it.
āTheyāre so supportive of their users and the people who want to make MineCraft better. I donāt think many companies would have such a liberal/supportive copyright/terms of service.
āWe think itās great and is part of their formula for success.ā