Minecraft becomes first video game to hit 300m sales

Minecraft becomes first video game to hit 300m sales

Technology

It has sold more than 800 million games across its entire multi-game series

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(Web Desk) - Minecraft, the best-selling video game in the world, has broken yet another sales record. 

Developer Mojang Studios revealed it had now sold more than 300 million copies worldwide. 

That far surpasses closest rival Grand Theft Auto V, which had sold 185 million copies as of August 2023.

But neither comes close to Super Mario as the best-selling franchise: it has sold more than 800 million games across its entire multi-game series. 

The second top franchise is retro puzzler Tetris, which has sold more than 520 million copies across its different variations since the 1980s.

Tetris has sold at least 425 million units on mobile devices alone, having had multiple versions of the game released on iOS and Android since 2008, and some lists consider it to be the best-selling game for this reason.

But these releases are significantly different in terms of mechanics and graphics - with great variety between Tetris on Ericsson phones in 2001, Tetris Mania on mobiles in 2006, and the later releases on iOS and Android.

For this reason, Tetris is usually considered a series, whereas Minecraft is the same game whether it is played on Nintendo Switch or mobile.

The head of Minecraft Studios, Helen Chiang, said the 300 million figure was a "milestone no one could have dreamed of when we were all placing our first blocks".

Minecraft was released by Mojang Studios in November 2011, but a pre-release, unfinished version of the game was first available in 2009.

It is extremely popular with children, young adults, and adults alike, due to its sandbox nature - meaning if you can imagine it, you can build it with the game's Lego-like blocks.

Minecraft was bought by Microsoft in 2014 for $2.5bn (£2bn) and has become a mainstay in its gaming empire - which Microsoft has just significantly expanded with its record breaking $69bn takeover of Call of Duty maker Activision Blizzard.