The BEST Minecraft Servers Around! Minecraft Bedrock Free + Members Servers

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Check out the BEST servers in all of Minecraft!

Looking for a great quality Minecraft server, at a great price? I recommend using Sparkedhost! All Prowl servers are hosted on Sparkedhost!
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I _really_ struggled with Realms when it came out, so I super frustrated with it. There was a point when I could no longer upload locally backed up worlds to my Realm so I just gave up. Instead, I found the Bedrock Dedicated Server project - which allows someone to run their own server on their own hardware. I use a mini PC that I got off Amazon for $300, but you could easily use an old PC that still runs. Works like a champ. I'm technical, so this was both fun and easy. I even added the firewall rules to my router that allows me to play away from home. I'm not interested in using someone else's hosting service when I can roll my own.

JasonTaylor-poxc
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I’ve had so much fun playing on bmc these last couple years. Can’t wait for next season! Coming soon!

mabatch
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Awesome thanks for the infomercial, I was going to ask how to get on with the twitch sub but you did well covering that too, had issues with my phone so I've not been on discord for a little while.

justinator
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The competitions + rewards are legit people! Think spawners, end portal frames, trims etc. My time on bmc has been amazing and I'm really looking forward to next season (even if I will miss s4 lol)

thedachmo
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Give this to the folks in the medieval district please, thank you

The English medieval period (The Middle Ages) started 476 AD (in year of the lord) and ended in 1485; the late medieval period started in 1300 and ended in 1500. Which gave way to the beginning of the Renaissance period. The name medieval comes from  medi-, meaning "middle", and ev-, meaning "age", medieval literally means "of the Middle Ages." Though the Dark Ages is used interchangeably with these two, it is the start of the Middle Ages and the fall of the western roman empire.

1066 CE is regarded as the beginning of the English Middle ages and this is because of The Battle of Fulford 20/09/1066 then it was the battle of Stamford Bridge 25/09/66 and then the Infamous Battle of Hastings 14/10/66

536 AD, the worst year in human history. The year that the Sun disappeared (1.5 years) and the beginning of the bubonic plague. Another eruption triggered in 540 exacerbated the cooling effect, making a mini medieval ice age lasting 25 years, causing widespread death across Europe Scandinavia, the Middle East and Aisa.
Europes & the Middle East population dropped by an estimated 1/3-1/2 Scandinavia dropped by 75-90%

Ballista: During the Middle Ages,  it was one of the original weapons that had success against fortified castle walls throughout Europe. The most famous appearance of the ballista in the Middle Ages was the Siege of Dover in 1216, when the French were able to get through Dover Castle's walls. Although it was the ancient Greeks that invented it.

Trebuchet: This war machine was invented during the late Middle Ages by the Chinese (around 1400 AD) in order to destroy the great walls of the enemy palaces

Forebuilding
mess hall/kitchen
armery/blacksmith
stables/barracks
Study/library
Sleeping quarters
Keep / Dungeon / Don jon (old French for Keep)
Church
Zwinger
Postern
Hoardings / brattice work
Crenellation, Merlon, Machicolation & Embrasure

• Cloister(s).
• (Flying) Buttress(es).
• Vaulted ceiling.
• Semicircular arches archivolt (Romanesque)
• arch archivolt (Gothic)
• ossuaries/catacombs
• Bastion is tower structure to reinforce the portcullis
• Barbican is a gatehouse away from the main castle
• Turrets
• Half-Hipped roof/ Clipped Gable roof/ Jerkinhead roof
• Crow-Stepped Gables
• Solar room (above great hall)
• tracery windows (Gothic)
• Jettying
• Whitewash & pastel wash (only for villages small towns, large towns & cities wouldn't pay for pastel washing it was expensive)

quoin Stones (not medieval, renaissance)

Styles of Castles
Palisade
(A wooden wall before it was upgraded to its stone counterpart)

Folly
(A fake part of the castle that is built to look like the keep as a distraction or a fake building out on a main road way or in a garden in an estate... just to... look cool)

Anglo-Saxon Burh's
(Built in the early Middle Ages as a reaction from the Vikings these large fortified settlements where cities built on flat lands with man made mounds and 4 wooden/stone walls, and a moat on the outside of the wall. No cathedrals, but they were churches, everything homes or Hām farmland shops/guilds where all inside the walls. These Burh were built on the side of a river 20 miles apart)

Motte-and-bailey castle / Shell keep
(You get a Shell Keep when you fully upgrade the wooden motte-and-bailey to stone.)

Concentric castle
(Two or more curtain walls with cylindrical towers)

Norman architecture
(Square exterior with Semicircular arches supported by massive cylinder pillars interior)

Château/Schlöss (French & German)
(country/manor house build for luxury but also for defensive purposes, no turrets and false battlements)

Crusaders Castle
(large vaulted chambers with massive walls, (three meters thick) running between ex & interior walls to corner towers. castle life included from kitchens; stables; forges; bakeries and bath-houses.)

Medieval castles
(Moat, with or without water. Bastion barbican, gatehouse, curtain wall & towers, keep aka Don jon/great tower, bailey/inner ward area within the curtain wall)

A fort or fortress or fortification
is a castle that's is surrounded by a city (a city NEEDS to have a cathedral, a church that contains the Bishops' throne), and then the city is surrounded by a curtain wall

Ington/ton (usually a farm or rural village)
By/Toft (village)
Ham/Stoke (home, small village)
Burn/Forth/bourne (a stream/river)
Wick (village/town/city that is a recognised manufacturer typically on the coast)
Gate (Norse, built next to a main road)
Bury/borough (Anglo-Saxon & Old English, Fort)
Thorpe (farmstead that relied on a larger nearby settlement for protection)
on-the-wolds, berg, den/denn/don/dun (hilly terrain, uncultivated)
Worth (protected AKA private village)
Dale/dean (Valley)
Stead (enclosed place)
Ville (Town that's known for their farms)
Burg (walled off city)
Ford (a river shallow enough to walk across)
Shire (prominent town or city)
Hampton (water medow)
Field/fell/felling (flat lands)
Meri/mere (Anglo-Saxon & Old English, Lake)
Bar/Barr (Anglo-Saxon, Gateway/entrance)

Styles of medieval architecture

• Embellishment. 

• Manifest piety.

• Perpendicular churches 
crucifix shape from above.

• The rise of Gothic.
Walls: buttresses, and spires (ogival arch) vertical proportions, pointed arches, external buttressing.
Roof: vaulted roofs steeply pitched.
Windows: large windows, extensive use of stained glass, and a revival of the medieval rose window.
Other: asymmetry.

• Decorated style. 
Gothic style but with elaborate decorative stone carvings. 

• Romanesque style.
Walls: massive quality, thick walls, round arches, sturdy piers, groin vaults, large towers, and decorative arcades. semicircular arches for doors, and arcades; barrel or groin vaults to support the roof of the nave; massive piers and walls, to contain the outward thrust of the vaults; side aisles with galleries above them; a large tower over the crossing. 
Roof: Roofs were made of wood and tiles fired clay marble bronze. Truss roofs.
Windows: semicircular arches for windows, few windows, Small glass windows but for important buildings big stained glass windows. 

• Cottage Style.
Walls: brick, stone, stucco & natural materials.
Roof: steep overhang, cross gables.
Windows: casement windows, window box's small panes & shutters.

• Wattle and daub timber framing. 
• Tudor.
Walls: Brick laid in an elaborate pattern on the ground floor, stucco or wood with decorative trim on the first story. Weatherboard or shingled walls with stucco.
Roof: steep roof and half-timbered gables.
Prominent cross gables (tudor crow stepped gables).
Windows: casement windows, grouped in rows of three or more.
Other: decorative half timbering.

• Boathouse/Nausts (Viking)
Walls: made of upright wood logs sometimes with planks and more upright logs on the inside to support to the roof.
Roof: as the name imply its an upside-down ship.
They were no windows in these structures but they were built on a stone foundation.

• Longhouses (Vikings)
Walls: small if the roof extended to the ground and these where more of a sleeping area for a family but you could have a longhouse roof that stopped 5-4 meters above the ground to give more headroom these types of longhouses were more of a communal space. Walls inside and/or outside were made of wattle and daub (no whitewash)
Roof: were typically pitched at 45⁰ or A-frame and the building front and back faced East to West direction.

• Stave Churches (Viking)
Walls/other: Constructed entirely of wood and had elaborate carvings. Roof: steeply sloped gable multi layered with a central tower/spire made of individual wooden shingles.

Masked_One_
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"blocks square" is the phrase you're looking for, Mr. P., not "square blocks"

-4000 to +4000 x and z is "8000 blocks square", but it's 8000² = "64 million square blocks"

cptCrax
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3:45 - I did not know that 200x200 thing myself when playing during BMC S4
8:26 - During the Eternia Halloween Event I did get lost rather easily in the Castle
16:24 - I stopped playing on that server because VH was really pushing what my PC could do

Also I may check out the Add-On Realm after I get settled in for BMC S5 not sure if I would play on the Realm because I can't focus on playing on multiple servers at the same time since I would probably be spending most of my time on BMC

sfisher
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Switch is a bit more in depth in order to connect to an outside server. And it doesn’t show up like you said it does. It might do for Xbox or PlayStation but not switch

synfulgaming
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I suggest the essentials add-on as looking really tasty

juicedsky
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I am playing 1.21. I have been mining for a long time but I didn't find diamonds yet.

Imru_gamer
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Hm looks like I need to poke around in some of these!

pathagenic
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how do you still have like 109k subscriber? From the type of video you are making, i feel like you should have like 2.67M subscirber now.

geraldyuko
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you should open up a Victorian district, the Victorians where Goth proper Goth no one alive today is as Goth as the Victorians where.

Victorian architecture

• Gothic revival (victorian)
Walls: Middle-class homes Wood Wealthy homes Stone or brick.
Roof: steep Perpendicular A-frame, + shape from above. Elaborate verge board trim along roof edges.
Windows: high dormers. Arched or lancet windows.


• Italianate (Victorian)
Walls: Middle-class homes Wood Wealthy homes Stone or brick.
Roof: flay and/or hipped roof, corniced eaves. 
Windows: Fanciful bay windows with inset wooden panels, Two over two double-hung windows, Curved or moulded window caps.


• Second Empire (victorian)
Walls: wooden clapboard.
Roof: Mansard narrow eaves with brackets below, round cornices at the top and base.
Windows: Tall, narrow windows Dormer windows that project from the roof,
(eyebrow dormers) Bay windows.
Other: Tower Wrought-iron,
galleries or "crests' above the upper cornice
Balconies Small entry porch.


• Queen Anne (victorian)
Walls: stone, brick, wood. Decorative trim, carvings wood/stone or terracotta.
Roof: steep roof, wrought iron finials.
Windows: bay and narrow windows that open vertically, stained.
Other: Cantilevered, upper stories, Elaborate exterior, decoration, Turrets. towers or cupolas, Wrap-around porch, Balconies, Cresting, Detached gazebos.

Masked_One_
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That sounds amazing. I wanna join too please.

Imru_gamer
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13:42, most used button of the whole world, right there.

XconeArtist
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Ripperoni... Press "F" in the comment section below to pay your respects since I haven't used platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or Discord for over 10 years.

dindunuphenwong