Clans

Clans servers center on small to mid sized groups that function as your real home in multiplayer. You are not just gearing yourself. You are stocking a roster, building infrastructure, and answering calls when something kicks off. Progress is tuned around coordination: scouting, pooling resources, holding claims, and protecting the people who keep the machine running.

The loop is straightforward and hard to quit. You farm and gear up, then turn that progress into safety and influence through territory, a stronger base, and a supply chain that survives losses. A prepared clan keeps extras on hand: building blocks, pearls, potions, spare kits, and utility gear. Looking rich attracts pressure, so the rhythm becomes prep, contact, recovery, repeat.

PvP is rarely clean, and that is the appeal. Numbers matter, but so do timing, terrain, and logistics: who brings rockets, who has invis, who carries obsidian, who can cut off exits. Fights spark at grinders, along travel routes, on claim borders, and during raids when defenders are patching breaches and trying to regroup. Even on vanilla combat, the deciding skill is keeping comms calm and making fast, boring calls under chaos.

Most servers create conflict through ownership rules that make bases defendable without making them permanent. Claims, power, raid windows, points, and similar systems force tradeoffs and open windows for pressure. Good clans build to the rules: layered storage, decoys, controlled entrances, escape paths, and enough redundancy that one bad night does not wipe the whole project.

What keeps clans servers alive is the social layer. Groups develop roles, standards, and reputations, and the server becomes a network of alliances, grudges, and deals. Your wins and losses land on the group, so rivalries feel personal and comebacks feel real. When you find a clan that matches your tempo, the world stops feeling random and starts feeling like a scene you are part of.