Terraria [Classics]
Xbox 360 · 2013
About this game
Terraria is a single-player and multiplayer 2D sandbox action-adventure game.
A player awakens in a procedurally generated world of forests, deserts, oceans, caverns, and ruins.
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Survival and exploration are the immediate objectives: gather materials, fashion tools, and build shelter before nightfall when stronger creatures roam.
Progression emerges from exploring deeper and farther, locating rare resources, and confronting powerful bosses that gate access to new materials and areas.
Defeating a certain boss in the underworld transforms the world into a more dangerous state known as Hardmode, introducing tougher enemies, new ores, and additional biomes.
Play centers on mining, crafting, building, and combat.
Most terrain blocks, plants, and furnishings can be mined and placed, and hundreds of crafting recipes turn gathered wood, ores, and monster drops into gear, tools, weapons, furniture, and vehicles.
The crafting interface shows every recipe currently available at the player’s nearby stations.
Equipment spans melee, ranged, magic, and summoner archetypes, with accessories that grant mobility and utility.
Bosses and events reward unique materials that unlock the next layer of recipes and exploration.
The world’s surface and its layered cave system contain many themed biomes.
Early enemies include slimes by day and zombies and flying eyes by night, while later regions introduce corruption or crimson biomes that spread through soil and stone and, after Hardmode begins, the hallow.
Environmental hazards, rare structures, and biome-specific loot encourage preparation and specialized gear.
Non-player characters can settle in player-built housing.
Meeting simple room requirements and fulfilling discovery or progression conditions invites merchants, medics, crafters, and other specialists who sell items, provide services, and enable new systems such as reforging or dye application.
Towns improve safety by reducing enemy spawns nearby, and some NPCs offer quests that guide
About Xbox 360
Microsoft's second console, the Xbox 360 (2005), is remembered for popularizing online multiplayer through Xbox Live and for a notoriously high hardware failure rate (the "Red Ring of Death") — which ironically makes well-preserved, working units and complete game cases more collectible today. Physical 360 games are still generally affordable, though limited Kinect-era peripherals and bundles are becoming harder to find complete.
Gamevaro tracks Terraria [Classics] for Xbox 360 with separate market values for loose, complete-in-box (CIB) and factory-sealed copies, sourced from real eBay sales. Prices also vary by region — PAL, NTSC-U and NTSC-J releases of the same game often sell for different amounts due to print run sizes and regional collector demand.
Adding Terraria [Classics] to a Gamevaro collection takes seconds — search by title or scan the box barcode, and the app fills in cover art, release details and current pricing automatically. This X360 release dates back to 2013.
Market values by condition
No price data available yet.
Rarity & condition
No market sales have been tracked yet for Terraria [Classics] — this could mean it rarely changes hands, or simply that Gamevaro hasn't recorded a sale for it yet. Be the first to add it to your collection.
Condition matters a lot for collector value: loose (cartridge/disc only), complete-in-box (CIB, with original packaging and manual) and factory-sealed copies are tracked separately because the price gap between them can be significant, especially for older releases.
Frequently asked questions
How much is Terraria [Classics] worth?
Gamevaro hasn't tracked a market sale for Terraria [Classics] (Xbox 360) yet, so no current value is available. Prices are sourced from real marketplace sales, and this page will update automatically once sales data comes in.
Is Terraria [Classics] rare?
No market sales have been tracked yet for Terraria [Classics], which could mean it rarely changes hands or that Gamevaro simply hasn't recorded a sale for it yet.
What's the difference between loose, CIB and sealed for Terraria [Classics]?
Loose means cartridge or disc only, CIB (complete in box) includes the original box and manual, and sealed means factory-sealed and never opened. These are tracked as separate market values because the price gap between them can be significant, especially for older releases.
Ratings & Reviews
Also on other platforms
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