You spend next six to eight hours chasing him down and defeating his minions until finally you face him in his castle. The main villain, the Arch Illager, stole an Orb of Power from the other Illagers and uses it for generic evil. The story is simple and exists only to tie together the dungeon-crawling levels. There's a definite advantage to a world constructed from the intentional low-fidelity building blocks of the Minecraft universe, especially with none of that pesky building or destroying to complicate things. It's a pretty low-impact game, and even when the screen fills with mobs, projectiles, and magic, I didn't notice any performance issues. I also set the frame rate to 120 (my monitor has a 144Hz refresh rate), which also caused no problems or hesitation, and I could probably go higher. I feel like I could just sit in the middle of the level and soak it up and still enjoy it.Īs far as graphical performance goes, I'm playing Minecraft Dungeons on a GeForce GTX 1080-powered gaming PC, and all the graphical settings automatically maxed out to their highest by default when I first started it up. The rustling leaves and whispering winds of the ambient sounds took some primordial part of my brain to the same place it goes at the start of the actual fall season. Its orange and yellow foliage sways gently in the breeze, and jack o'lanterns and harvested wheat bundles lay by the wayside in the ruins of the town. One of my favorite levels is an autumn-themed village that’s been pillaged by the forces of the Arch Illager. You could transplant the Minecraft Dungeons soundtrack into Minecraft proper and it would feel right at home. Levels with higher stakes near the end, for example, have much more dramatic music, but it never goes overboard or feels out of place in the Minecraft universe. It has a soundtrack different from the main game, but it does a phenomenal job of keeping the lo-fi style of the original's music while tweaking the feel just enough to make it thematically appropriate for a dungeon-crawling adventure. Open Minecraft Dungeons on your Nintendo Switch or PS4.“Music and sound, too, are excellent.The below steps feature the Nintendo Switch for cross-play with an Xbox Series X, but the steps should be similar for Playstation. People playing on PS4 or Nintendo Switch will need to go through a couple extra steps.įor extra info on what kind of security and privacy settings a Microsoft Account gives you, especially for parents, check out our comprehensive parents guide to Xbox and accounts, and consider the Xbox Family Settings app for extra control from your mobile device. ![]() If you're playing through an Xbox console (including the Xbox Series X and Xbox Series S or Windows 10, you don't need to do anything else here. It's super easy to set-up, gives you a ton of security and privacy controls, and provides native integration into Xbox and Windows 10 for even easier play. ![]() For Minecraft and Minecraft Dungeons, you'll need a Microsoft Account. Most games that support cross-play use a common account across platforms to enable it since platforms like Xbox, PlayStation, and Switch don't natively talk to each other. ![]() Source: Windows Central (Image credit: Source: Windows Central)
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