Microsoft teases Minecraft AR game for mobile devices

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,294   +192
Staff member
Why it matters: Microsoft owns one of the hottest IPs in gaming and based on a recent teaser, the company is looking to further maximize its investment with a mobile-based augmented reality version. Pokémon Go proved consumers' appetite for AR gaming and Microsoft could be poised to take the craze to a new level.

Microsoft at the conclusion of its Build 2019 keynote on Monday shared a teaser video for what appears to be an augmented reality version of Minecraft.

In the teaser, Minecraft Creative Director Saxs Persson accidentally leaves his phone on a bench outside the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle where the Build conference is taking place. When his bench mate reaches for her phone, she finds Persson’s device instead and discovers the Minecraft AR app running.

We’re shown a brief glimpse of the app in action but will have to wait until next week to learn more.

Microsoft is hosting a 10th anniversary bash for Minecraft on May 17 to celebrate the “past, present and exciting future of the decade-old franchise.” It’s safe to assume that this new app could very well be the centerpiece of Microsoft’s event.

If there’s any question as to whether or not a Minecraft AR game could be a hit, one only needs to look back a few years to the staggering success of Pokémon Go. Launched in the summer of 2016, the augmented reality game from Niantic became a cultural phenomenon that is still going strong. As of this past December, the game had generated more than $3 billion in revenue.

Permalink to story.

 
I have never understood the appeal of Minecraft, but this I would at least try. My kids LOVE Minecraft, and so do some of my friends, but I could never get into it.
 
I have never understood the appeal of Minecraft, but this I would at least try. My kids LOVE Minecraft, and so do some of my friends, but I could never get into it.
If you want to get an idea of the appeal of Minecraft, go with more adult versions. Look up Empyrion which is a game where you can design your ships and base block by block. There's some good strategy behind different builds in that game. A step further would be the game Secondlife. Everything in the game is created by the players who play it. You literally build everything using basic blocks, then manipulate them to look like what you want, then script them to move and do what you want. I actually make real life money from my builds on Secondlife so it's a true adult version of Minecraft.
 
Back