Minecraft: Story Mode - A Telltale Games Series
Telltale's episodic take on the blocky universe trades pickaxes for dialogue trees, and it works better than it has any right to, provided you go in knowing it plays like a cartoon, not a game.
GamerScout Verdict
Best for younger players and Minecraft fans willing to accept an interactive cartoon over a true adventure game.
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About Minecraft: Story Mode - A Telltale Games Series
My first thought when this landed on my desk was simple: who exactly is this for? Telltale had already done Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Borderlands, all properties with built-in dramatic tension. Minecraft is a sandbox where you make your own story. Forcing a linear narrative onto that seemed like a category error. Turns out the answer is more interesting than the premise suggests. You play as Jesse, a young adventurer whose gender and skin tone you pick at the start, a small but welcome touch that fits the spirit of the source material. Jesse and a tight group of friends, including the loveable pig Reuben, head to the Endercon Building Competition, which quickly spirals into a world-threatening crisis involving the legendary Order of the Stone and a creature called the Wither Storm. The five-episode arc takes you from the Overworld through the Nether to the End and beyond, hitting most of the iconic Minecraft biomes along the way. Telltale clearly did their homework: the crafting table makes an appearance, combat against zombies and creepers uses a simple swing-and-health-bar system rather than pure QTE, and there is even a moment where you must craft a sword using the correct in-game recipe, though the game hands you the materials and accepts wrong answers without penalty. Minecraft veterans will get the references; newcomers will not feel lost. The core loop is pure Telltale: dialogue choices with a timer, quick-time action beats, and the illusion of branching consequence. That last word carries some weight here, because the honest critique is that your choices tend to be shallower than in Walking Dead or Tales from the Borderlands. The QTEs are largely optional in early episodes, and many dialogue forks converge quickly. Adults who came to this series for genuine moral weight may feel the guardrails. On the flip side, the voice acting is genuinely strong, Patton Oswalt voices the male Jesse with warmth, and the script has enough charm that even players with zero Minecraft nostalgia reported finding something to like. The Saturday-morning-cartoon tone is a deliberate design choice, not a production shortcut, and the later episodes, particularly three and four, tighten the pacing considerably before the finale loses a bit of steam. A practical note worth knowing: the game was pulled from major digital storefronts after Telltale's original closure, which makes third-party keys the main acquisition route today. The upside is the game itself still runs and saves correctly on PC. The downside is there is no official patch pipeline and the engine has its classic quirks: occasional audio desync, background character animation glitches, and unskippable recap and credits sequences between episodes. None of these are deal-breakers, but they are real. The honest audience for this is younger players who love Minecraft, families looking for a shared-screen adventure with mild stakes, and Telltale completionists. Hardcore fans of the developer's darker work will find it thin. Anyone who can meet it on its own terms, a breezy, blocky hero's journey with decent voice work and a few genuine emotional punches, will walk away having had a good time.

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System Requirements
Minimum
- Processor
- Core 2 Duo 2GHz or equivalent
- Memory
- 3 GB RAM
- Graphics
- ATI or NVIDIA card w/512 MB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 3 GB available space
- Sound Card
- Direct X 9.0c sound devi…
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Game Info
- Developer
- Telltale Games
- Publisher
- Telltale Games
- Release Date
- Oct 13, 2015