Games: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 07:08, 22 January 2023
With Minetest you can run and play games, which are complete playable interactive experiences. This is considered to be one of the core features of Minetest, as Minetest itself is not a game but an engine or platform for other voxel games to be built on top of.
Introduction
Description
What we call a “game” in Minetest can, in practice, be all sorts of things: It could be a game with goals, or a sandbox, a puzzle, a mix of those or something completely different. Games can be selected and launched from the main menu directly and stand on their own. Minetest further allows all such games to be extended and modified by the use of mods. The general definition of “game” in Minetest is “what you put into the ‘games
directory and launch from the main menu”.
Technically, a game is really simple: Internally, a game itself a collection of (pre-packaged) mods and a few extra files (mostly for the main menu images), but packaged together to provide a complete interactive experience. which can be used out-of-the-box. When a player starts a game, all the mods packaged with that game will be used.
Screenshots
To give you an impression about the variety of possible games in Minetest, here's a screenshot gallery of many games:
This is not all, though. There are many different games for Minetest, which you can browse between on ContentDB.
User manual
Using a game
If you already have some game installed, here's how to use them:
- Start Minetest
- On the gamebar at the bottom of the "Start game" tab, click on the game you want to play. (On the first start, Minetest Game is pre-selected)
- Create a new world by clicking on “New”
- Enter a world name, select a Map generator and hit “Create”
- Click “Play Game”
Finding games
The first game you probably already have is Minetest Game. Finding it is trivial. ;-)
The main place to find and install games is ContentDB, which can be accessed in the main menu by pressing the 'Plus' icon in the main menu gamebar. Installing games from the Content tab is as easy as:
- 1. Searching for the game on the search bar.
- 2. Clicking/tapping the install button in front of it.
Another place to find games is in the Minetest forums.
Installing games
Games installed using the Content tab are automatically set up and installed.
However when installing games manually, they usually are distributed in Zip archives (other archive formats such as .tar.gz
are of course possible, too). Follow these steps to install a game from an archive:
- Get the archive which contains the game
- Extract (or unzip) the archive into the the
games
sub-directory of Minetest. The location of this directory depends on your operating system:- GNU/Linux:
$HOME/.minetest/games
, where “$HOME
” refers to your home directory. - Mac OS:
$HOME/.minetest/games
, where “$HOME
” refers to your home directory. - Windows: into the
games
directory found in the main program folder in which you have installed Minetest. It is the directory containing the directories likebin
(which in turn containsminetest.exe
),builtin
,client
,doc
,fonts
,games
,locale
,mods
,textures
, etc.
- GNU/Linux:
The game should now be installed, and will be shown up the next time the main menu gamebar refreshes.
Playing on servers
You can also “find” games by just joining a highly customized server. While many servers host Minetest Game or (most likely) a modded variant of it, some servers host other games as well. Because of the nature of Minetest, every server can be unique. Joining a server is a good way to quickly explore the possibilities of Minetest without needing for a manual game installation.
Making a game
Technically speaking a game is essentially a collection of mods developed to work well with eachother, that is accessible from the main menu. The mods are put in a mods/ folder inside the root of the game's directory. For more information about what can go into a game see the Minetest API documentation.
Technical info
You also can use the environment variable MINETEST_SUBGAME_PATH
to define additional search paths for games, if you would like to store games in another directory.