Terraria

aka: Terraria: PlayStation 4 Edition, Terraria: Xbox 360 Edition
Moby ID: 51623
Windows Specs
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Special Edition

Description official descriptions

Terraria is a two dimensional platform game of exploration and crafting. Players can use mines and picks to collect various items from the environment including wood, ore and even spider webs. Resources acquired from the environment can be placed or crafted into all manner of items.

The simple crafting system automatically lists any item that you have the materials to craft. First priority is to set up a base before night fall hits in order to protect yourself from roving zombies and eyeball monsters. You can craft many items for your home, including doors, walls, tables, chairs and beds.

During the daytime slimes roam the land and must be avoided or dispatched with a weapon such as a sword or axe. As you gather materials you will be able to construct more powerful weapons from different ores as well as armor to protect yourself.

30 monsters are present in the game including slimes, floating eyeballs, giant earth worms and zombies.

Building a nice home will attract NPC (non-player characters) to your house to set up residence. These can include a merchant to trade with and nurses who can heal your wounds.

Terraria supports single player, multi-player servers and player vs player combat.

Spellings

  • テラリア - Japanese spelling
  • 泰拉瑞亚 - Simplified Chinese spelling
  • 泰拉瑞亞 - Traditional Chinese spelling
  • 테라리아 - Korean spelling

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Credits (Windows version)

108 People (98 developers, 10 thanks) · View all

Game Creator
Programmer
Production Assistant
Graphic Designers
Creator
Executive Producer
Designers
Programming
Graphics
Music
[ full credits ]

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 82% (based on 54 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.8 out of 5 (based on 73 ratings with 1 reviews)

Addictive gameplay and tons of content. What more do you need?

The Good

  • accessible gameplay
  • exploring is genuinely fun
  • lots of items to discover and craft
  • charming simple graphics


**The Bad**
  • no clearly defined plot or direction
  • difficulty is punishing at times
  • music gets repetitive way too quickly


**The Bottom Line**
Take the core ideas of Minecraft, mix in a little Castlevania, then dress it up in the brightest-colored sixteen bit pixels you can find, and you'll have something that looks and plays a fair bit like Terraria. This side-scrolling explore-and-craft-a-thon is a substantially different creature from the majority of PC titles being released these days. More importantly, the game play of Terraria is easy to get into, and the progression to the end of the game is both a challenging and addictive process. If you've spent any time with Minecraft, Terraria's underlying structure should sound familiar: you harvest resources from various environmental sources such as tree and underground ore veins, use those resources to build new items and devices. Those items will allow you to harvest different resources or process existing ones in a way that wasn't available to you before, and doing so will gain you access to other parts of the randomly-generated map. You start the game with nothing but a wooden hammer, a wooden axe (?!) and the clothes on your back. Oh right, and there's a guide. Yup, there's some random guy is wandering around in the remote wilderness, and he'll give you helpful advice on how to start out in the game if you talk to him. While these initial conversations will help get you on your feet and building the most rudimentary of items and structures, after the first few hours of the game, the guide's advice stagnates and you'll have learned all you can from him. From then on, you're pretty much on your own. While the side-scrolling platform-style game play should be familiar to anyone who's picked up a game pad in the last thirty years, one thing Terraria fails to convey is what the over-arching goal of the game actually is. You'll find out pretty early on that there are some bosses to fight and many an elaborate structure can be created using the resources you harvest from the ground, but there's no actual plot here -- no character conflict, no grand quest to undertake, no ultimate goal to strive for. Though I love sandbox games for the freedom they provide, some kind of simple storyline to motivate me in a forward direction would have helped Terraria feel like a complete experience as opposed to a series of set pieces arranged randomly for my amusement. That being said, the set pieces provided are very well done indeed. Exploring the various tunnels under the surface of Terraria's landscape is really addictive -- hours will fly by as you mine ore, discover chests, fight monsters and generally try to stay alive against the ever-increasing difficulty of the pitfalls Terraria throws at you. And believe me, this game will get tough. Venture into the wrong area ill-equipped and the game's evil minions will make short work of your character, sending him back to your home point to rethink your approach. Luckily, the game allows you to set your difficulty from the outset -- death can cost you as little as a cut of your gold, or as much as your entire inventory. The truly crazy among you can even play hardcore mode, where death is permanent. The graphics of Terraria are colorful, charming, and intentionally pixelated. All the sprites are well designed and work well for the game's style. The sound effects work well enough, but the music gets pretty repetitive after a few hours. The problem isn't quality, but quantity -- there's only one track for when you're exploring the surface, and two or three for the underground, depending on how deep you are. The game had an impressive inventory of items you could find and craft upon its initial release, and developer Re-Logic has been diligent about releasing patches for the game, both for bug fixes and additional content. As of the 1.1 patch, the game's monsters numbered over 70 and you have access to hundreds of craftable items. At first glance, Terraria looks like a relatively simple platform game, but it's cartoony presentation and easy-to-learn gameplay conceals a hefty amount of depth and a surprisingly challenging difficulty curve. Casual gamers will enjoy Terraria's addictive exploration, but hardcore completionists will stick around to discover all the crafting recipes and conquer the difficult boss fights. Whichever camp you fall into, Terraria is excellent value for your dollar -- a true indie gem.

Windows · by The Cliffe (1552) · 2012

Trivia

Sales

The game sold 432,000 copies in its first month, over 12 million across all platforms by update 1.3 in June/2015, and 30.3 million across all platforms by April/2020 (14 million on PC, 8.7 million on mobile platforms, and 7.6 million on consoles).

Cancelled successor

The successor Terraria: Otherworld (a spin-off with a bigger focus on role-playing elements) was announced in February 2015. Instead of the Terraria makers Re-Logic, the developer was Engine Software who also made the first console ports of Terraria. In April 2017, the development team was switched to Pipeworks Software, the porters of the later console versions. However, the game was ultimately cancelled on April 12, 2018.

Awards

  • GameStar (Germany)
    • 2011 - #3 Adventure of the Year (Readers' Vote)
  • Steam Awards
    • 2016 — The 'Test of Time' Award — Nominated
    • 2016 — The 'Just 5 More Minutes' Award — Nominated

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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by snuf.

PlayStation 3 added by Fred VT. Nintendo 3DS added by JP Vaughan. Stadia, Nintendo Switch added by Rik Hideto. Wii U added by Harmony♡. Android, Linux, Macintosh, iPhone, iPad, PS Vita added by Sciere. Xbox One, Windows Phone, PlayStation 4 added by Kabushi. Xbox 360 added by stabel.

Additional contributors: MAT, Scaryfun, Havoc Crow, Solid Flamingo, Stratege, Patrick Bregger, Ƒreddƴ, Rik Hideto, Kennyannydenny, IcyBird1.

Game added May 21, 2011. Last modified February 15, 2024.