Quickly beating Minecraft is a process with a lot of steps. To understand the accusations at play here, first you have to understand just how much of a role luck plays in a top-level Any% speedrun of Minecraft and how ridiculously lucky Dream appeared to be in the streamed runs in question. The admission seems to finally put to rest months of drama and dueling accusations between Dream and the mods, settling an argument that relied on complex mathematics to prove that Dream's runs were vanishingly unlikely to be the result of random chance alone. Over the weekend, though, Dream said in a message posted to Pastebin that he had 'actually been using a disallowed modification during ~6 of my live streams on Twitch' while maintaining that he 'didn't have any intention of cheating.' Further Reading Billy Mitchell takes his Donkey Kong high-score cheating case to courtFor months now, popular Minecraft streamer Dream has insisted there was nothing fishy about six 'Any% Random Seed' speedruns he streamed last October, despite evidence to the contrary presented by the moderators of clearinghouse.