Reviews from

in the past


eater of worlds pls eat earth we are in an economic decline and our planet is burning

So many different playstyles to choose from. You can build if you wanna build, fight tons of different bosses, and explore with friends. There are parts of the game where progression drags, and these parts can be straight up unfun. Maybe it's a skill issue, but the grind in these parts harms it being a masterpiece for me.

So.... 10/10,
The combat is so fresh, every boss and enemy feels new and its always repayable.

God is this game fun to play. I absolutely love everything in the late game. Every time I play this I have a blast, especially if it's with friends.

If I see another TModLoader pop up I'm gonna unscrew someones hands off


Just amazing. Mods just make it a different game and in the good way.

i am not the demographic for this but its fun with friends

Overrated af I don't see the allure in this game im afraid

i'm always gonna have a bias for minecraft, but i can't deny this game is way better from every front, even if i like minecraft a little better. i love picking insanely different weapons and armor everytime in this game the most though. insane breath of fresh air

To clarify how much i love this game,i will tell you how much memories it has with me:

İ played this game since beta.With nearly all possible devices,starting on mobile,leaning to ps4,xbox and then PC.

Even without mods,Terraria makes grinding and spelunking fun and never stops getting updates and many love from its community.

Simplesmente um dos maiores jogos do mundo, o único jogo que mesmo sendo comparado a minecraft nunca se decaiu, uma questão apenas de opinião minha mas esse jogo é maior que minecraft, por conta de ser um jogo indie que cresceu do zero e pelo fato de que mesmo com uma atualização a cada milênio, as atualizações trazem muito mais conteúdo que o minecraft que pertence a uma das maiores empresas do mundo

O jogo é bastante legal, possui gráficos bons, e uma trilha sonora unica, é um jogo que vale a pena jogar com os amigos. E tambem ele é bem leve, rodou no meu pc de boa, pude jogar sem problemas. Recomendo :D

Nobody can convince me that there is anything wrong with this game. Like are you really going to complain about the $10 game that has received consistently large updates for years and has one of the greatest mods ever made for it?

pretty cool but i can't make a computer and google how to make a bomb, so

classic, have beat several times on every console

This review contains spoilers

Only complaint I've got is how in the end of pre-hardmode you spend half of the time you've already played up to that point trying to secure your world against corruption. IT'S A CHORE.
No corruption spread mod for the win.

Outside of that though... God I love this game.

The first ever game I bought on Steam. I finally played it to completion, 13 years later. Having received near constant updates during that time period, it was so choc-ful of content that it took over 100 hours to complete.

Every minute was FUN though, and I had sort've done just-barely-enough to complete the game. There is still loads of content here if I want it.

A serious contender of a game for me, in one of those "If you could only play one game for the rest of your life" hypotheticals.

I'm mad at this game for stealing so much time from me. It's good.

Terraria is a game I put quite a lot of hours to back when I was a teenager. It's a game that's been around for forever, and has at least once been claimed by its developers to be at an end state and won't see anymore updates, but it seems a new huge content patch is always on the horizon whether the game is in "active development" or not, and it's changed a LOT since I last played it XD. I played it a bunch over the course of a few days with my significant other, and we got to the end credits (which I was quite surprised to see, honestly) after about 21 or so hours of play together.

Terraria doesn't really have a story. It got a lot of comparisons to Minecraft back when it came out over a decade ago, and not totally unreasonably so. It's a game about spawning in a world of wilderness whose primary component is made up of blocks you can manipulate to build new structures. There are NPCs to find and interact with, and they have a cute sense of humor, but it really isn't the main reason you're here, and virtually all of their dialogue is very easily ignored if you wanted to. Though there are named enemies and themes among them and such, there isn't really anything that could be called a narrative, but that's just fine. The primary thing that sets Terraria apart from Minecraft isn't just that the former is 2D while the latter is 3D, but Terraria also has a design centered much more around loot and combat rather than building pretty structures.

Most of the gameplay loop of Terraria revolves around exploring to get materials (usually mining, but sometimes dungeon delving) to then gear up and/or find the materials necessary to fight the next boss in the game's progression. These bosses generally have some key material they drop or change the world in some way upon their death that will allow you to embark upon the next tier of gear hunting and dungeon delving to fight the NEXT boss, and so on and so forth. The game takes place on a 2D plane, and you have all sorts of weapons you can fight them with. You can tech towards a melee (either swinging or stabbing or even yo-yos or maces if you want to) or ranged (whether it be bows or guns) character, or you can go for magic (and there are oodles of spells to find). Since I had last stopped playing, they've even put in items and sets around summoning familiars to fight for you as well, which is a playstyle I had a lot of fun using as a supplementary part of my other builds.

Though it is only 2D, you get more and more ability to gain more mobility and terrain manipulation as you go through the game. At first you're either just fighting the bosses on their own terms or building little arenas of floating platforms to better fight them in, but eventually you can get wings to fly, pegasus boots, anti-gravity potions, and much much more, and that's not counting the bosses that have special arenas you need to fight them in on their own terms. The game can be pretty damn difficult, but the bosses are really tightly designed and you need a lot of strategy to take them down alone. Honestly, my main complaint with the game (aside from that some difficulty spikes are a bit too steep) is that it's mostly designed around a single-player experience in most respects, as just having one other person between the two of us made many bosses MUCH easier as they had to split their attention between two targets instead of one.

The presentation of Terraria is quite simple in most respects, but it's also very charming. You can build pretty buildings full of furniture if you want (and you'll have to at least build simple houses for all the NPC merchants you'll want in your town), and you can also not just wear cool armor, but even dress yourself up in all sorts of silly vanity costumes if you like (ranging from a simple wizard costume to a downright copyright infringing Toad from Super Mario costume you can find XD). The music is often quite understated, but it does its job well, especially for the boss fights.

Verdict: Highly Recommended. Terraria hasn't stuck around for only a decade on pure luck alone. It's a really solidly designed game with a very satisfying gameplay loop that's tons of fun whether you're alone or with friends. It's a very easy pick-up to recommend if you're looking for a fun time on either a PC or a console, and it's very likely that even the current version I've played won't be the actually full experience if I revisit it again in another few years x3

minecraft'tan çalmışlar amk.


Haven't played this without friends and am always the tank, but i love it. Always fun to see the numbers go up and kill time with friends

How minecraft could be better