Minecraft Feature. The horrific-looking spawn of the 2b2t server as of June Image via Wikipedia. Modified 31 May Feature. Also read: Minecraft Redditor uses frost walker enchantment to terrorize their friend Griefing techniques in Minecraft Destruction techniques A large base being completely griefed by lava Image via minecraft.
Vexes in Minecraft: Everything players need to know. Minecraft Snapshot 21w40a: Everything players need to know. Edited by Shaheen Banu Login to post your comment. Show More Comments. No thanks Delete. Cancel Update. While there is not much that can stop a determined griefer, there are ways for a server to mitigate the risks of being griefed.
The following is a list of steps server owners can take to try to keep their server protected:. For a much more in-depth and anti-grief biased analysis, see Crayboff's thread on the topic. You can also watch who you let on your server or realm. While there are many people creating grief-friendly client modifications, there are equally dedicated programmers creating server plugins to foil their attempts. Using the popular and extensible Bukkit server software and other Server Mods , programmers have made numerous add-ons to enforce correct client behavior.
There are plugins that allow administrators to log and rollback all edits done on an individual basis, employ jails to trap griefers, and even protect certain blocks or entire chunks. Griefing is far from a new phenomenon in video games. It dates to the late s, when it was used to describe the willfully antisocial behaviors seen in early massively multiplayer online games like Ultima Online and first-person shooters like Counter-Strike.
Fortunately for server administrators, the increase in griefing has pushed the creation of numerous anti-griefing tools and techniques. Minecraft Wiki. Minecraft Wiki Explore. Main Page All Pages. Minecraft Minecraft Earth Minecraft Dungeons. Useful pages. Minecraft links.
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Dibbell, Julian 18 January Retrieved 18 May The Escapist. Categories Tutorials Add category. Cancel Save. Fan Feed 1 Java Edition 1. Universal Conquest Wiki. Most griefers' goals are to destroy as much land, buildings and creations as they can in order to make the server as unusable as possible. This can include Creative "nuking", where users instantly mine all blocks within reach, and "torch nuking" when the griefer destroys only torches. Many hacked clients have these as built in features.
A more time-consuming and generally expensive method of griefing is the creation of TNT cannons to bombard other players' creations from a safe distance. When it comes to destroying houses, griefers will often steal the player's most valuable items before destroying the house.
A fast, and potentially more effective, method if the server allows it is spawning withers. End crystals are also effective, but more expensive and less practical to place. This can be avoided with block and chunk protection plugins if you are using Bukkit. Logging and rollback plugins can completely undo the damage done by individual griefers.
Restricting TNT will render cannons worthless. You can use the following commands , either in a repeating command block , or a function to prevent TNT from being used.
Nearly as frequently as simple destruction of servers, griefers also often attempt to create nude or offensive pixel art. Also, cages around players that are AFK are built, often of materials unable to mine with tools obtained early on, like obsidian.
Sometimes players even surround other players' structures with obsidian, bedrock , and sand or gravel which are annoying due to their falling properties. If you have chosen to use Bukkit, logging and rollback plugins can once again completely undo the damage done by griefers. Sand and gravel can be removed quite quickly using torches.
Banning offensive players is a good way to discourage griefing. Thus the concept of griefing was formed in the minds of online gamers long before it became a commonplace form of entertainment.
One of the earliest examples took place in the virtual bulletin board Usenet in User Ian Kelley described a now-common form of griefing called "ninja looting," which refers to stealing items or treasure belonging to another player.
This often involves following an unsuspecting player in-game and looting the bodies of the enemies they kill before they have a chance to get to them. From this point forward, griefing was a common nuisance in online games that became widely popular in the early s. Team-based first-person shooters like Team Fortress Classic and Counter-Strike were perfect feeding grounds for hungry griefers.
A few years later, mainstream news outlets like Wired and The Guardian began reporting on this type of online harassment. Spawn eggs made this even more of a problem. One can get the command through various Bukkit plugins.
To prevent it altogether, there are plugins stopping mobs from spawning. If able, griefers often will attempt to place as much lava preferable because of its killing properties and water around a map in order to make it as ugly and dangerous as possible. Rarely, water and lava can be used in conjunction to create massive amounts of cobblestone, or even rarer, obsidian, very quickly. The best way to prevent this from happening is to simply limit who is able to place lava or water using a Bukkit plugin.
If the damage has already been done, the best way to remove it is with world editing plugins. The use of client modifications such as "Kill Aura" is frequently used to give the griefer a large advantage. The most effective way of preventing this is to disable PvP in the spawn area with Bukkit plugins and provide multiple exits for newly spawned players to escape from a single exit point is very predictable.
For a long time, block logging plugins did not have the ability to roll back the growth of trees. Because of this, many griefers will place saplings and use bonemeal if available to grow full trees in the locations where houses once stood, preventing rollbacks from easily undoing their damage.
Previously, server admins would restrict the use of saplings and bonemeal with Bukkit permissions, however, that lead to problems for normal players. Most builders use a lot of flammable materials, and if the server has fire spread enabled, a griefer armed with a Flint and Steel can destroy a lot, very quickly, including setting themselves on fire. Fire was nerfed in Beta 1.
However, this can still burn a large chunk of flammable objects. Social Engineering is any technique used as an attempt to gain the trust of people by acting like a normal player or creating a situation where the legitimate players need to trust them. This is not a typical form of destruction griefing, however, this is a strategy employed by many griefers to gain trust and cause rage, or it may be done to get OP status, and cause great destruction.
Be very careful who gets administrator tools, make sure that one knows them well enough to trust them with power. Trolls like to annoy people, rather than grief. There are several ways to troll, such as killing a person and then watching while one throws their diamond pickaxe into lava, spamming, and promising to give them stuff, giving them the stuff, then killing them the moment they go out of a safe zone. Most of these cannot be blocked, though they are usually easy to notice.
A troll always wants one to see what he or she has done so he or she could annoy one more. A good temp ban will solve things.
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