![]() ![]() There's everything, in fact, you might expect to find in the metropolis it's based on. But alas, this is a screenshot from Minecraft, and it is a view over the city of Greenfield, possibly the most impressive build project I've seen to date.īased closely on Los Angeles, and built to 1:1 scale so every block represents a cubic metre in real life, Greenfield has been the work of more than 400 people for the last nine years. Until you fullscreen the image above and peer closely, noticing the flat tones on the buses and the blocky curve on the roadway, you wouldn't expect it to have come from a game more commonly used to build eye-hurting failure hovels from ugly cubes of cobblestone. No Man’s Sky and Minecraft are theoretically infinite in size, but that’s because the worlds are entirely determined by complex algorithms rather than manual design work.It just doesn't make sense. ![]() Note, we’re not counting procedurally generated worlds here. ![]() We’ve put this list together of the biggest open world games to see the limits of what video games can offer at the moment. Still, there’s a great thrill of standing at the top of a mountain, looking out at the unending vista before you, and knowing that you can explore every inch of it. Games like Elden Ring, The Witcher 3, and Breath of the Wild aren’t big enough to even scratch the bottom end of this list, despite being some of the best sandbox games ever made. Of course, bigger doesn’t always mean better. While open-world games aren’t the be-all and end-all of modern triple-A video games anymore, there’s still something great about a massive world that you can explore to your heart’s content, full of activities, challenges, and random encounters to keep you busy for hours on end. ![]()
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