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Meet Dream Meet Dream, the Mysterious Minecraft YouTuber who is one of the Fastest-growing Creators on the Platform

YouTuber Dream has broken many records and received millions of views. However, the person behind the avatar remains unidentified. Dream is a YouTube channel with 16.4 million subscribers on YouTube is one of the fastest growing YouTube channels. - Though he has faced controversy, the Minecraft expert is still one of the most loyal and dedicated fanbases online. For more stories, go to Insider's website.



Minecraft YouTuber Dream has rapidly risen in the creator ladder, becoming one of the fastest-growing YouTube channel's of 2020 and the top two overall creator of the year, according to the platform. The green faceless avatar with a knack for discovering "Minecraft's" cavern-filled secrets has managed to gain over 16 million users in less than two years. What is it that makes Dream so unique and popular, when there are thousands of content creators building worlds with Minecraft's characteristic blocks?



Who is Dream?



Dream's identity as well as his personal life aren't known to the public. The YouTuber, who prefers to keep his face private, decided not to reveal his identity. The avatar he uses online is a simple neon-green model. The style of the figure is iconic, and easily recognizable to the typical "Minecraft" user.



Mysticat, a YouTuber says that Dream's branding is "unprofessional but that doesn’t mean it’s bad." Dream employs a Microsoft Paint drawn character that's super doofy and appealing to kids, which is Minecraft's core audience."



Although Dream began his YouTube channel in 2014 it's not clear whether the channel was active until July 2019. In his first video, he deliberately "triggers" viewers by playing the game as badly as he can. He does things like placing blocks on the top of chests, killing sheep to get their wool and eating rotten meat.



Dream began to upload content more frequently following his first upload. Felix Kjellberg, known online as the massively popular PewDiePie was playing "Minecraft" for his massive audience of more than 100 million users at this point. Dream was able to find a way to re-engineer Kjellberg's "world seed," meaning, the randomly generated world his "Minecraft" game had created, using tricks he had learned from forums. In the first two days, the video received around 200,000 views, prompting him to make three more which would reach more than two million views total in a little under two weeks. At the end of July, Dream had gained 54,000 subscribers , and his fame was born.



For the next few months, Dream's channel would continue to grow in millions of views and thousands of subscribers but his second big breakout moment came in November 2019. After uploading multiple videos that made use of the trending format "___ but ___ changes each time,"" Dream struck diamond. His video , titled "Minecraft but Items Drops Are Random and Multiplied ..." became a viral hit and racked up 32 million views, and giving the video 600,000 new subscribers.



Over the next few years, Dream would upload fairly frequently, steadily gaining hundreds of thousands of subscribers per month, and millions of views on video. His "Minecraft Speedrunner vs." series, where Dream would choose to complete the game while certain NPCs, or non-player characters pursued him, or had objectives that needed to be completed, were massively popular. Dream also began working with GeorgeNotFound as a friend and future participant on Dream's roleplaying server that he created in May of 2020.



Dream has been accused of cheating in Minecraft



Dream's channel was approaching its peak of subscriber growth, reaching 2.6 million subscribers in August 2020, and becoming the mainstay of the game. He had uploaded a speedrun of the 1.14 version of Minecraft in March of 2020 and 1.15 in June, so when version 1.16 version was released later in the year, he had to go with it. He finished his run in fifth place, happy with where he was placed on the leaderboard.



On December 11 , 2020, moderator of the official speedrun forums Geosquare uploaded an YouTube video entitled "Did Dream Fake His Speedruns - Official Moderator Analysis." Geosquare and his co-workers Minecraft moderators had looked over the livestream runs and believed that Dream had recorded events that were too statistically unlikely to have occurred without the help of mods or cheats. The moderators looked over the 29-page document and concluded that Dream was one in 1.75 trillion likely to have found the items required to complete the game.



In multiple videos and Twitter threads, Dream denied any wrongdoing. In his own video addressing the claims made on December 23, Dream shared a study that he commissioned using analysis of his company Photoexcitation that found that the chances of his run occurring were in fact one out of 100 million.



The speedrunning mods released another five-page document dismissing Dream's study. Dream responded with an official tweet, stating that "this drama has been stressful for most of the Minecraft community, and a lot of it was due to my initial reaction to the drama, so I am fully responsible for that."



Dream has been subject to harassment, including doxxing



Dream fans could locate his home by using a photograph of his kitchen uploaded to his second account on January 1, 2021. They also shared the information, which is known as doxxing.



In a Twitlonger from January 7, Dream discussed the incident and his ex-girlfriend whom believes is spreading false rumors about him. Dream denied her allegations and stated that he doesn't care about YouTube. He also said that his friends who appear in his videos do not receive a cut of his revenue.



How Dream is able to master the YouTube algorithm



His understanding of YouTube's algorithm is responsible for Dream's huge growth in 2019 and 2020.



He makes use of keywords in the right spots and leverages trends to create thumbnails that people will be compelled to click. souldevteam Similar to the wizardry that Jimmy Donaldson, known as the wildly popular Mr. Dream has learned to succeed on YouTube, just like Beast.


Read More: https://souldevteam.net/
     
 
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