Public world telemetry / survival
A living world,
measured.
The public record of a small Minecraft world: who has passed through, what they achieved, and where the world has been worked. Colourful, delayed and deliberately less precise than the server itself.
The collector is assembling the first public-safe world record.
01 / presence
Who was here.
A Teams-like strip of player colour, reconstructed from joins and leaves. A lit segment means presence in that interval—not voice, chat or movement.
Waiting for attendance coverage.
| Player | Observed time | Sessions | Last seen |
|---|
02 / advancements
The achievement wall.
Minecraft calls them advancements. The wall counts completed tracked definitions; recipes and hidden implementation records stay out of the theatre.
— player records
03 / world activity
Where the world changed.
A density map of block and object interactions recorded by Ledger. This is Minecraft X/Z space, not an Earth map and not a trail of somebody's movement.
—
No published cells in this view yet.
Choose a glowing cell for its coarse activity total.
Public by design
Spectacle, with the sharp edges filed off.
Player names are already public Minecraft identities. Presence is reduced to time buckets; world activity is grouped into coarse cells and delayed before publication. The collector does not publish IP addresses, UUIDs, chat, commands, inventories, operator status, raw logs or exact player positions.
Want your row renamed or hidden? Contact Edward Dunne. Historical totals are evidence of the world, not a ranking of the people in it.