Hololive

Hololive Minecraft servers are fan community worlds built around the Hololive VTuber scene. It is not a new ruleset so much as a shared context: you join to build, hang out, and talk in references without stopping to explain who a talent is or why a certain sound bite matters.

Most play like survival or semi-vanilla with the real progression being social. You claim a spot and make something that reads as Hololive fast: a talent-themed house, a shrine, a concert stage, a recreation of a known landmark, or a district styled after a generation. The best servers feel like a lived-in museum, packed with small nods in signs, map art, head displays, armor stands, and little redstone jokes.

Because the theme is the draw, plugins usually support community more than complexity. Expect claims and anti-grief, chat formatting and nicknames, head databases, and occasional custom music or resource-pack touches for venues. Moderation tends to be tighter than average survival to keep public spaces clean and the culture friendly, especially in busy build areas.

Events are where it clicks: talent-themed build jams, clip-referenced scavenger hunts, seasonal festivals, karaoke nights, and server-wide projects that give everyone a reason to show up at the same place. Even when there is an economy, it is typically there to fund communal builds, not to turn the server into a grind.

The social contract is straightforward: be respectful, do not imitate talents to mislead people, and build with intent. If you want PvP metas or progression races, you will feel out of place. If you want a long-running world where your base doubles as a tribute, this format fits.