My five-year-old little boy is totally, head over heels obsessed with watching people play Minecraft on YouTube. He had never even played the game before, but for some reason, watching men with English accents build and narrate sucked him in.
And he’s certainly not the only one – Stampy has well over 7 million subscribers! There are apparently A LOT of people interested in watching.
Since then he has started playing himself and I am genuinely impressed every time he shows me something he has created. I don’t have the patience to figure the game out and I can say with certainty he is better at it than I ever could be.
Still though, he spends just as much of his electronics time watching people play as he does actually playing. And even though I’ve heard of parents banning Minecraft (for reasons like, it is sucking up all of their kids time), I’m totally OK with him watching.
Why?
It’s what he likes to do. Even if I can’t quite get it, he enjoys it and it makes him happy. It’s 2016 and this is the trend. If I concluded it to be stupid or a waste of time and refused to let him watch, I would be no different than my parents telling me rap music was ridiculous. They were totally old and didn’t get it. As long as it’s not harming him or anyone else he’s free to watch. Especially if I know he is watching safely on the kids YouTube app.
(Here are 12 kid-friendly Minecraft YT channels.)
It helps him get better. This article from Toca Boca explained three reasons why your kids like watching people play video games. The first is that they are learning new game skills in the same way if you were trying to master a new dance move you would watch someone over and over who did it well. You would watch someone skilled at that particular thing and mimic what they do. He’s learned a lot from watching Minecraft videos which is a good thing, for yet another reason…
Minecraft may actually help him. Articles have been streaming out explaining the wonderful things Minecraft is teaching your kids and I totally buy it. First and foremost, the game takes incredible creativity. Everything is built from scratch and designed by you. We can build with the few bins of blocks we have here but that would never compare to the things he can create on Minecraft. (Not that we don’t still play with Legos – we do.)
Creativity and inventiveness are so important to me as I raise my children. I’ve become even more convinced of that importance since this wonderful article was released. We can teach many things, but the ability to be original and innovative is difficult to learn. Finding fun ways to nurture that creativity can be hard. Yes, we build forts, play make believe, create art and more… this is just another awesome tool in our toolbox.
And it is a tool my little boys adores.
Liz is a just a mom trying to keep it real about how little she sleeps, how often she gets puked on and how much she loves them. You can find her here every day writing about real-mom moments.
April P. says
I’m so glad my kid is not the only one obsessed! My son is 4 and he talks “minecraft talk” all the time. I have no idea what he’s talking about half of the time. Lol! He watches the videos constantly on YouTube Kids and plays too!
Sue Ann says
my 7 yr old loves stampy, too. and cupquake. I agree w/you on this subject, I allow him to watch, it’s not hurting anything. and although i have never ever played the game before, nor had any desire to, he just recently got Minecraft for his WiiU, which is 2 player capable. so now i actually get play along with him. he amazes me by what he can do with this game and he shows me something new each time we play together.
Tina says
My 13 year old daughter also loves Minecraft and so does her girlfriends! They skype each other while playing and talk about what they’re building and visit each other’s worlds!
Karin says
YES! I am not alone….
Todd Patten says
A family member posted this in Facebook and I wanted to take a moment to post my reply/comments here.
This article is spot on. Minecraft requires creativity and spatial intelligence and problem solving skills. The same skills required for high paying engineering and science careers. While I cringe at the idea of my son, or any other child, spending hours with their faces buried in their screens, I have to force myself to remember that this is THEIR way of researching and learning.
If the likes of da Vinci, Tesla, Franklin, Edison, the Wright Bros, and Einstein had this much information at their fingertips as children, this efficiently delivered, they would have done the same thing. Just as these innovators likely buried their faces in books — satisfying the insatiable curiosity and hunger for learning — children today will turn to video and online tutorials. They’ll first follow the steps they learn from the videos, then on their own, using what they’ve learned, build and expand upon the original steps — in the same way innovators of the past built upon the knowledge of their peers and predecessors.
Is every child that becomes obsessed with minecraft going to go on to be the next Einstein? Absolutely not. Just as not every child who explored the texts written by past innovators went on to become famous innovators themselves. However, I’m confident that many of them likely went on to make the small, incremental contributions that keep us moving forward — as will the children of today who have embraced this new medium for learning, researching and experimenting.
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