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Image Credit: TikTok/@Abstry

Minecraft College Football Has Had An Explosive First Season — And I Mean That Literally

It’s game night, and the home team is in the lead. A touch down! The stadium erupts with cheering pigs. This isn’t your typical Sunday night football. It’s Pig State versus Ole Moo, a college game in Minecraft.

Over the past few months, Minecraft has had a bit of a sports boom — even drawing the attention of ESPN. Yes, I’m talking about the game that made my brother’s laptop in middle school whir with so much activity it practically levitated. While I was busy giving Hannah Montana’s room a makeover on Disney Channel dot com, he was building empires in Minecraft. As the saying goes, whatever you were into as a preteen will remain an obsession for life. So, it only makes sense that the generation who grew up with Minecraft are returning to recreate the sports teams that fuel their campus life in-person.

Unfortunately, we’re also the generation scarred by campus violence, a grim reality that’s all too common even in Minecraft College Football — from stadium bombings to campus shootings. These violently campy plot twists beg the question: why would there be terror attacks in a make-believe season of football? Let’s unpack the lore of Minecraft College Football’s first season on TikTok and why it’s become so popular. 

What is Minecraft College Football? 

The first rumblings of Minecraft College football date back to July, with this “clip” from a Chicken State game. New teams, with their own multibillion dollar stadiums, and marching bands, started popping up on TikTok. The Minecraft College Athletics Association, home to in-game soccer, baseball, hockey, basketball and now football leagues, has over 25 schools with standout colleges like Pig State, Ole Moo, Villager Tech, Panda State University and Polar A&M.

@abstryischallenged We are pig state! #minecraftfootball #minecraft #mcaafootball ♬ original sound – Abstry

The league even has dedicated commentators, with @n0stalgiac taking the lead on sports broadcasting. There is something reassuring about watching college bros debate each other over Minecraft sports statistics. I guess we never grow out of being a couple kids screaming “NOOB” at each other in the Steam chat.

How does Minecraft College Football work? 

Minecraft is a sandbox game, which means players are free to roam, build blocks, and/or fight zombies. Re-creating monuments of the human world, like football stadiums, in block-form, is not new to the game. MCAA teams are named after common “mobs” (mobile entities), AI-driven game entities that are like living creatures in Minecraft such as creepers or pigs. These creatures can be tamed, into, say, warming the seats of a giant stadium or sparring on the field. The games are either played by mobs or users themselves, but user-generated games can involve stabbing, archery, and….death. 

 

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If you want to play on the team, you have to commit to their bit. For example, the pigs of Pig State or the cows of Ole Moo communicate on the field with “Oinks!” and “Moos,” respectively. How and when the matches happen is inconsistent, but those who want to procrastinate on their homework can usually find a game to watch live on the MCAA Football Discord. 

How’s the first season going? There weren’t any bombings or acts of violence, right? Right?! 

The MCAA’s first season has seen the epic highs, and devastating lows of “college” football. In mid-October, Pig State WON against rival Ole Moo. But, as their fans rushed the field, Pig State’s stadium was bombed. Yes, you read that right. The next day, CCTV footage of the bombs getting planted leaked on TikTok, then footage dropped showing Ole Moo coaches on Pig State’s campus pre-game. League schools, from Blaze State to Pillager University, quickly put up expensive memorials for the lost fans and players. Within a week, Pig State returned, unveiling a new $13 billion stadium in grand style — the Lorax led the players onto the field, while Minecraft music stars Kendrick Llamar, Snoop Dog, and Dr. Stray, performed at halftime. 

@n0stalgiac Tributes to Pig State continue days after the tragedies 🐷🙏 #minecraft#mcaa#minecraftcfb#minecraftcollegefootball ♬ original sound – n0stalgiac

Then, the stadium was bombed *again*. I’m so serious. 

Was Ole Moo’s head coach involved this time? Was it Creeper University kids? Or, was it an inside job for insurance money? Suspicion grew when a Pig State fan shot up a Villager Tech party, then two of Ole Moo’s star players were separately discovered dead. Elsewhere in the league, scandals mount: Polar A&M’s QB was caught with underage Polars, Hurricane Helene wrecked another stadium, and every day brings news of violence, theft, or destruction. Tragedy is as familiar to the MCAA as real college life.

In a way, the events are a role play of some kind of cursed version of reality for college students who’ve ever had to lockdown or evacuate campus. When their calls for campus safety are met with inaction IRL, they masochistically live out their fears in Minecraft, like some kind of 8-bit exposure therapy. High school and college students are staging “pink outs” at their schools’ games to show support for Pig State while school teams dedicate their practices to their MCAA counterparts

Similar to TikTok’s fake movie Zepotha, or even the Timothée Chalamet look-alike contest, Minecraft college football allows creators to actively participate in the authorship of a viral moment. The MCAA give students who typically avoid participating in campus sports the chance to play on a team, or even attend a game, all from a server far cozier (and less loud or sticky) than a football stadium: their bedroom. Deep down, we all yearn for the weird local events of Gilmore Girls, there’s nothing stopping us from finding communities online. So yeah, you can catch me wearing pink for Pig State.  

Izzy Snow
Izzy is a social media marketing girlie & writer based in NYC. They love learning t.v. lore, deep cut meme references, and reading astrology charts. You can find her lurking near the cheese bin at Trader Joe's and marinating in Riverside park most days.