![]() "I’m not really sure what I'm expecting out of all of this," wrote Dream."I think the whole situation was extremely shitty overall for everyone involved and I wish that I could go back and do things differently because it was some of the worst weeks of my life and still impacts me every day." He goes on to apologise to the speedrun moderators for "dragging them through the mud", but also states his belief that they were "unprofessional" throughout their investigation. ![]() When 1.16 came out A server-side plugin was made for our videos that slightly increases the rates." The YouTuber, who has over 30 million subscribers on the platform, claims that it was only way later after denials, the hired statisticians, and the public spats, that he realised he may have in fact been running a modded game after all.ĭream explains: "In our challenge videos, before 1.16, we always increased the enderman spawn rates and pearl drop rates out of convenience It makes the videos better because we don’t spend hours looking for pearls or spend so much time farming blaze rods (a totally RNG thing, mostly pearls). ![]() In a statement posted to his main Twitter account on 30th May, Dream admitted that he was playing with a modded version of the game during his 1.16 speedruns, a mod - originally designed for his Minecraft Manhunt series and which he thought was "server-side" - and which did increase the drop rates of elder pearls, though he claims that he "never had any intention of cheating". The speedrunning team fired back, refuting these findings.īut now it appears that Dream has had enough with the charade and has finally admitted he did in fact cheat in those speedruns. It's an accusation that Dream vigorously defended himself against - at one point hiring a "Harvard astrophysicist" to refute the allegations.
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