Dream FINALLY admits to cheating in Minecraft speedruns: "I’m sorry to anyone that I let down".
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did dream cheat working WUZ8%
💾 ►►► DOWNLOAD FILE 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 › News › Minecraft. The sudden flip turns from “Dream didn't cheat” to “who cares he cheated he's still the GOAT”, and the incredible lengths they'll go to in order. Yes, he cheated, the speedrun mod team took his speedruns down already and Geosquare made an excellent videon on the issue. Dream has made a response, but it's. Dream admits to cheating in Minecraft speedrun, claims he was unaware of illegal mod Dream has given a detailed breakdown of his findings. 9 Popular content creator Dream made headlines last year as drama surrounded his "Minecraft" speedrun. The drama came in once it was denied by the SpeedRun. Almost 30 pages of a report were released that provided enough evidence for the team to argue that Dream's speedrun wasn't possible without some kind of cheat. Dream was immediately upset and lashed out at the verification team. On May 30, , Dream posted a large Twitter thread that addressed the situation in more depth. It was deleted, but an archive on Pastebin has it recorded. Essentially, Dream unintentionally cheated. At the time everything went down in , he wasn't aware that he cheated because of some issues with the "Minecraft" update and the video mods that he had in place for streaming. The thread of over 50 tweets had a lot of information explaining the struggles Dream had with the situation. There was more to it than most people knew at the time. One of the biggest bombs that Dream dropped in his version of the events was the bias the team SpeedRun. He started by saying that he knew several of the mods weren't fond of him, and it made him feel "targeted" by the group. These feelings stayed around as he wrote that "multiple speedrun moderators [were] messaging [him] scary things about how it was a [disaster] and no one could agree on things This is where he notoriously hired a professor to help confirm the mod numbers. The professor eventually found out that the numbers the moderators had come up with were off, and that Dream may have been able to beat the odds and get the speedrun that he did. This made the moderators look even more biased. But unfortunately for Dream, there was more than just an internal bias problem — he actually cheated. As shown on the Pastebin archive, there actually was a cheat used in Dream's game. It was completely accidental on his part, but it affected more than one of his Twitch streams. Apparently, Dream had hired a developer to create a mod that helped him stream. The mod was simple, and Dream mentioned that fans could see its effects when it came to custom backgrounds and a few other small details on his stream. However, early versions of this mod tampered with a few of the game's stats, which were seen in the speedrun in question. Dream found out after the drama blew up by discussing it with his developer, who had kept the same improvements to the game that Dream's "challenge servers" had. So all in all, Dream did cheat on the speedrun. However, he didn't mean to, and he's since apologized and doesn't hold a grudge against the moderators anymore. The supposed bias inside SpeedRun. The accidental cheating mod Xbox.
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