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Minecraft’s archeology feature is finally getting dug up for 1.20-

Mojang has just announced that the long-awaited and much-delayed archeology feature is finally coming to Minecraft. A new tool, type of sand, and several different types of items to unearth are all coming in the Minecraft 1.20 update this year.

If you’d been paying close attention to the Minecraft rumor mill, this will likely confirm some of your suspicions started by hints from developers. Mojang originally announced the archeology feature in 2020 and then postponed it for several major update versions. It’s back at last though, as Mojang has confirmed today in an announcement post.

“With this feature, players will find a new type of sand—suspicious sand—near desert temples,” Mojang says. “Using a newly introduced tool, the brush, players can brush away the suspicious sand blocks to reveal hidden tools, bones, sniffer eggs, and pottery shards. The new pottery shards contain partial patterns, and four shards can be put together to make a pot with patterns telling a unique story.”

Combining pottery shards into ancient pots seems particularly neat. I’m all about getting some new décor items for my base that actually show a journey I’ve been on. Turns out archeology is a nice fit alongside the Sniffer also coming in update 1.20 after being picked by players in the 2022 mob vote. We already knew they were ancient creatures being brought back to life Jurassic Park style, and digging those eggs up with the new brushes sure seems to combine tidily.

Mojang says that these features will be arriving in snapshot builds and Bedrock version betas “very soon.”

Mojang has intentionally kept the feature list of the 1.20 update pretty wrapped up, saying last year that it had learned from its mistakes of announcing features too early. This time around the developers are planning to tell us bits and pieces at a time as we lead up to the new version launch date. “We’re going to be revealing the remaining features for Minecraft 1.20, so keep your eyes on Minecraft.net and our social channels,” Mojang says.

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Japanese YouTuber might be the first in the world arrested for posting gameplay clips-

A man has been arrested in Japan’s Miyagi prefecture on suspicion of violating copyright laws after he posted a video containing gameplay from the popular visual novel STEINS;GATE Hiyoku Renri no Darin (via Automaton). The Content Overseas Distribution Agency (CODA) announced the arrest and said the man had uploaded the video, which included the ending of the game, without permission from the rights holder Nitroplus, on top of which he had monetised the video and received ad revenue.

The same man is alleged to have uploaded other videos containing copyrighted content such as the anime version of STEINS;GATE and Spy×Family. CODA describes these videos as “fast content”, part of a popular genre in Japan that condense down a given work, anything from games to TV shows to movies, often including captions and / or narration that summarise what’s going on for the viewer. Netabare is its own category within this of videos that show and detail endings or plot twists.

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‘Cheating and exploiting undermine the integrity of our game’- Over 600 Star Citizen accounts have been suspended for racking up in-game currency-

Star Citizen has had a massive problem with cheaters exploiting systems to get \more in-game currency for months now, but developer Cloud Imperium Games (CIG) has finally addressed the issue and suspended over 600 accounts. 

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