Minecraft Live is a well-known yearly event that acts as a celebration of the community and the game as a whole, featuring a community preshow and guest appearances during the event itself. Usually, the event is streamed on YouTube and Twitch with any community input coming from Twitter, but recent leaks seem to indicate that things will be different for this year’s live event.
Mojang uses the event as a way to build hype, as well as get the community’s involvement in future updates. This can be clearly seen in instances like the mob and biome votes, in which the playerbase was able to influence which mobs were added to the game, and in what order the game’s biomes would be updated.
Will Minecraft Live 2022 have an in-game element?
The leak
Phoenix SC is a well-known YouTuber with nearly two million subscribers. He recently uploaded a video covering some leaks from the Chinese version of the Bedrock Edition development wiki.
Just hours after the most recent beta edition of Bedrock went live, Preview 1.19.0.25, there was a post on this development wiki. This post breaks down some of the code inside the development language files, and while almost all of it is public knowledge, nine new lines have been added, which have been confirmed to be in the game’s code.
Interestingly, these lines of code all reference the Minecraft Live event. There are captions that seem to act as countdowns, event announcements, and event endings. In fact, there are even title and heading lines, both indicating the event, with one acting as a hype message that will appear before the event, and the other having the name of the event on the screen.