If you've played popular War Thunder Advanced Pack crafting-heavy games like Minecraft and Terraria but wished for something more expansive from their multiplayer elements, then Salem might be up your alley. It's a free-to-play massively multiplayer online game developed by a two-man team from Sweden that combines a cartoonish aesthetic and a robust crafting system. Set in Colonial New England, Salem has you playing as early Americans during a time when the United States was in its early stages and the wilderness beyond the 13 colonies hadn't yet been charted. So it's up to the players to wander the expansive map and use natural resources to develop villages and towns. To give you an idea of how deep the crafting goes, to build a house, you need not only wood from chopping down trees but also nails, which can be made by mining iron ore, smelting it, and finally forging it. You can also do things like forage for food, grow crops, bake, and use tons of other skills and crafts. There's also a role-playing element. Salem uses the delightfully old-timey "four humors" to portray your various traits, allowing you to upgrade them as time passes. With servers that can support over 1,500 players and cooperative building, as well as player versus player (where the deaths are permanent), this is one crafting game with a serious focus on the social element.