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Chapter 3: Replicating Minecraft

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Jeff searched it on Google to avoid any plagiarism after confirmation and saw that Minecraft was actually not created yet.

He was happy since minecraft is literally a game that dominated his previous world achieving massive achievement in gaming history.

Notch created Minecraft in 2009 and was officially released in 2011.

Even before the full release, Minecraft was already blowing up in popularity due to word-of-mouth, like YouTube videos, and its unique gameplay.

It offered a sandbox survival experience where players could build anything literally an infinite LEGO world, and people loved it.

He too was included. It won the award of best selling game of all time, As of now, Minecraft in his previous world had sold over 300 million copies, making it the #1 best-selling video game ever, beating out games like GTA V and Tetris.

Not only that Minecraft basically built YouTube gaming culture. Creators like PewDiePie, Dream, and many others gained fame through Minecraft.

It also birthed mods, mini-games, roleplays, animations, and entire servers like Hypixel.

It won multiple Game of the Year awards and was inducted into the World Video Game Hall of Fame in 2020.

Praising for its creativity, education value, and long-term appeal. But In 2014, Microsoft was bought by Mojang (the studio behind Minecraft), showing how much value it had.

With his godly programming skill, he had full confidence in recreating the game.

"Replicating Minecraft, is just going to be easy as eating a cake" he though inwardly.

Jeff plugged the USB into the PC and opened Google.

He downloaded Unity, one of the best game development softwares available, and saved the files onto his USB drive.

After the download was complete, Jeff started working on replicating Minecraft.

Jeff opened the application and his fingers danced across the keyboard as he began programming his version of Minecraft.

For the first hour, he focused on replicating the game's basic mechanics, such as the block-breaking and inventory systems.

With each line of code he wrote, Jeff's excitement grew. He couldn't wait to see his creation come to life.

Jeff was completely engrossed in his programming, typing away on his keyboard with lightning-fast speed.

He was so focused that he didn't even realize that a group of people had gathered behind him, watching in awe as they saw the line of coding kept moving up.

As Jeff continued to work, the crowd grew larger, and some even began to record him on their phones.

Jeff didn't notice this because he was so engrossed in programming. Jeff was in the so called zone, and his godly programming skills were on full display.

As the second hour approached, Jeff began working on the game's aesthetics.

He spent time designing the block textures and character skins, making sure they were faithful to the original game while still putting his own spin on them.

For three hours straight, Jeff continued to work tirelessly, creating each element of the game with precision and accuracy.

He carefully coded every block, every creature, and every item until the game was nearly complete.

Jeff leaned back in his chair and admired his work.

He had created only 70% of Minecraft from scratch, and it was all thanks to his godly programming skills.

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