BangClickReload Header featuring pixelated 8-bit videogame characters BangClickReload mobile header featuring pixelated 8-bit videogame characters

Terrariarrific – How Terraria Dug a Hole and Stole My Heart

BcR logo with white and red pixelated text on a black background.
By Paul Blackburn
July 13, 2011

Terraria

Terraria is, as many people might describe it, a 2D Minecraft. Some would argue that it’s nothing at all like Minecraft, despite being about digging for materials, crafting items, fighting monsters and exploring, but sure, I know what they mean.

The key, fundamental difference between Minecraft and Terraria is simple: Minecraft is a creative exploration game, you dig and find materials, the purpose of which is to build grandly designed structures, mechanisms, and secret underwater bases (yes please). Terraria, however, is about the adventuring, the questing, and the looting, with a painfully cheerful injection of charm. It has more types of enemies than you can shake a lightsaber-style stick at, not to mention there are boss fights, and there are actually friendly NPCs that populate your world as you progress, offering you advice and items to help you on your quest for glory.

I’ve only really scratched the surface of it so far, and have crafted myself a handful of cool items, but it’s not just about the swords, bows, pickaxes and hammers – it’s also guns, grappling hooks, anti-gravity boots, jet-packs, magic potions, invisibility spells, torches you can actually hold, helmets with headlamps, and a ton more awesome items that I still haven’t found or crafted yet. There’s even a currency in the game, in the classic form of bronze, silver, and gold. Gold! The sweet, delicious, hard-earned funding you killed dozens of evil creatures for, which you can give to the various in-game characters in exchange for the magical, mysterious, and downright must-have items that could help you smash that giant flying skeleton head into lots of little boney pieces. Yes. Adventuring is good.

Terraria

The character customization is significantly more entertaining and useful in comparison to that of Minecraft, allowing you the freedom to wear a great selection of silly or awesome things ranging from the most pointless vanity items, to the most useful armour made from Nightmare stone. Nightmare stone! Was there ever a stone you wanted more? I have to admit, I’m a little scared of it, and having to travel deep, deep, and deeper into the dreaded reaches of the earth to get your hands on the more valuable resources is even scarier. Every natural cavern and tunnel is rife with enemies, and if you aren’t being mauled by a giant man-eating worm that burrows directly into your face, or being hacked to pieces by a handful of skeleton warriors, you’d best be careful not to drop off a ledge to your untimely death, because seriously, you will lose a lot of coins. Standing at the precipice of a deadly chasm, shrouded in darkness, only to throw a torch into the abyss and watch the light slowly fall, and eventually disappear into nothingness, is truly a feeling that inspires a surprising amount of awe for a game that seems nothing more than a simple 2D Mario sandbox adventure – and yet somehow it is one of the greatest games I’ve played since Minecraft first came out.

Terraria

What’s that you say? Can you build a fort and hide out from all the flesh-eating zombies and multi-coloured jelly-beasts that want nothing more than to explode your frail human body into a gooey mess of bloody chunks and coins? Can you play with your friends? Can you each assign yourself to a team colour, turn PVP on, and have a good old multiplayer romp following all your own home-made rules? Yes to all of the above, and yes, you should pay the £5-6 for this fantastic game, right now.

Latest Articles

Dome Keeper - Official Artwork Poster

Dome Keeper – Multiplayer Update

Matt Clarke

April 15, 2026

Dome Keeper is an excellent little spin on the tower defense game, in which you play the role of a jetpacking miner defending his base from swarms of aliens, whilst searching for a hidden relic buried somewhere beneath him. And now, with this huge free update, you can play it with friends.

Cloudpunk

Cloudpunk – Review

Matt Clarke

March 28, 2026

I want to talk about Cloudpunk, a game where you get to be a flying-car delivery driver in a futuristic cyberpunk city. Its world is an incredible achievement of environmental design, and while the gameplay itself may be basic, the city of Nivalis is a thing of beauty to behold. Nivalis is built out of hundreds of hand-modelled cuboid buildings; there’s nothing procedural about it. Apparently it took 3 years for the devs to design the city, and it really shows.

Cast n Chill, a pixel art style fishing game featuring a small fishing boat, dog companion and a beautiful background of autumnal mountain trees and a lake with a waterfall.

Coffee Break – Cast n Chill

Matt Clarke

March 19, 2026

I do love me some quality pixel art, and it doesn’t get much better than this. Cast n Chill is a cozy side-scrolling fishing game by small indie dev team Wombat Brawler, with absolutely gorgeous visuals. It’s simple to play, and you you can dip in and out of it at your leisure, making it a fine addition to our collection of coffee break games.

Want more?

Here's 3 random other things to check out:

Cult of the Lamb screenshot of three of the evil bosses.

Review – Cult of the Lamb

Matt Clarke

March 8, 2026

I recently played through Cult of the Lamb, a satirical take on the concept of running a demonic cult. It turns horrific things like sacrificial rituals, cannibalism and straight up gaslighting abuse into hilarious amusements by filtering everything through its cartoonish lens. You are a sheep, after all, and all your followers are sycophantic anthropomorphic […]

Cloudpunk

Cloudpunk – Review

Matt Clarke

March 28, 2026

I want to talk about Cloudpunk, a game where you get to be a flying-car delivery driver in a futuristic cyberpunk city. Its world is an incredible achievement of environmental design, and while the gameplay itself may be basic, the city of Nivalis is a thing of beauty to behold. Nivalis is built out of hundreds of hand-modelled cuboid buildings; there’s nothing procedural about it. Apparently it took 3 years for the devs to design the city, and it really shows.

Gaming Memories – World of Warcraft

Matt Clarke

April 16, 2017

WoW consumed my life for almost the entirety of 2004/05, when I was studying for my A-levels, and was probably a key contributor to my D-grades. I’m probably not the only person who would admit to daydreaming of roaming through Elwynn Forest, even many years after I stopped playing. I just spent so much time there, and other places of that world, sometimes roleplaying, always questing, but best of all simply exploring an unknown land. Even though I LOVE what Blizzard did in Cataclysm, my favourite memories all come from what they call Vanilla WoW, the original version of the game.

Copyright © 2010 - 2026

Site designed and hosted by Tekamutt Media