@@fastvincent1 Yes but I also saw a video where 3 ppl build some base i think sky mason and it was unfindbable until it was raided, so by caption every 2b2t will be found i thought they had more then 1 base
I just don't get it. Why the fuck would anyone build anything on this server. Anarchy severs and hiding a base from griefers is one thing but the griefers on 2b2t have history of literally hacking the server/game to get your location. This takes any kind of sport out of the whole hide and seek aspect. These people should have been perma banned.
Honestly, griefers are some of the most pathetic gamers on the planet. The only thing they have to do is destroy other peoples things. But i suppose when you are speedrunning life as an incel, the only way yo get your rage out in between jerk off sessions is to destroy other peoples hard work.
FITMC is probably the most legendary 2b2t Minecraft reporter right next to Salc1. That line of chunks where there is nothing but empty void is due to his airship. It carved out old chunks and thus no islands spawn there. Edit: FitMC is older and has a larger subscriber account. But that’s not to say Salc1 hasn’t made contributions to 2b2t’s history. He calculated the worth of 2b2t to be at least $1.6 million with conservatives estimates. Go checkout that video. It’s really neat
Why do people continue to build knowing their work will all eventually fall? Simple. For the same reason people make ice sculptures. There is a vast beauty in the temporary.
“Sand mandalas traditionally take several weeks to build due to the large amount of work involved in laying down the sand in such intricate detail. It is common that a team of monks will work together on the project, creating one section of the diagram at a time, working from the middle outwards. The destruction of a sand mandala is highly ceremonial. Even the deity syllables are removed in a specific order along with the rest of the geometry until at last the mandala has been dismantled to show impermanence. The sand is collected in a jar which is then wrapped in silk and transported to a river (or any place with moving water), where it is released back into nature to disperse the healing energies of the mandala to sentient beings in water and throughout the world.”