I was wondering, if I made a mod, and its been dead for over 3 months, and its up to date, am I allowed to bump it? Because It gets kinda annoying to not being recognized for my hard work.
"Roughly 95% of Minecraft players hate Villagers and would be very happy if they were removed. If you are one of the 5% who actually like villagers, copy this into your signature." -RainbowGirl
No, not unless the bump is an announcement of a new update.
That being said, don't continuously abuse that with something such as "Fixed some bugs." If there was a major update that could spark some discussion, then adding detailed information on a post about what was changed, bugs fixed, etc. would be acceptable.
That being said, don't continuously abuse that with something such as "Fixed some bugs." If there was a major update that could spark some discussion, then adding detailed information on a post about what was changed, bugs fixed, etc. would be acceptable.
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Please see above, and make sure to read the rules at rules.mcf.li
It means that you can't unless you are releasing a new (and as Mathy said, significant enough to create discussion, not just fixing one or two minor bugs) update.
"Roughly 95% of Minecraft players hate Villagers and would be very happy if they were removed. If you are one of the 5% who actually like villagers, copy this into your signature." -RainbowGirl
It means that you can't unless you are releasing a new (and as Mathy said, significant enough to create discussion, not just fixing one or two minor bugs) update.
Thats kinda stupid. Now my mod will never be noticed.
Thats kinda stupid. Now my mod will never be noticed.
If you'd like to update your mod and add something to it, you can certainly have a post saying what you added. That's not a bump because it conveys useful information.
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Quote from Fermat »
I have discovered a truly remarkable proof of this, which this margin is too small to contain.
[;/quote]
if you already made a mod, i don't see why you couldn't throw in a cool update to get it even more attention, or if your so worried about getting noticed post on more sites
(insert cringy dubstep minecraft intro here)
Links to Mods: EndPlus | Deeper Caves | FarLands
"Roughly 95% of Minecraft players hate Villagers and would be very happy if they were removed. If you are one of the 5% who actually like villagers, copy this into your signature." -RainbowGirl
That being said, don't continuously abuse that with something such as "Fixed some bugs." If there was a major update that could spark some discussion, then adding detailed information on a post about what was changed, bugs fixed, etc. would be acceptable.
I think so.
Please see above, and make sure to read the rules at rules.mcf.li
Wait, so does that mean I can, or can't?
(insert cringy dubstep minecraft intro here)
It means that you can't unless you are releasing a new (and as Mathy said, significant enough to create discussion, not just fixing one or two minor bugs) update.
Links to Mods: EndPlus | Deeper Caves | FarLands
"Roughly 95% of Minecraft players hate Villagers and would be very happy if they were removed. If you are one of the 5% who actually like villagers, copy this into your signature." -RainbowGirl
Thats kinda stupid. Now my mod will never be noticed.
(insert cringy dubstep minecraft intro here)
That isn't really stupid, because if everyone was allowed to do it, you'd still be in the same predicament as you are now.
If you'd like to update your mod and add something to it, you can certainly have a post saying what you added. That's not a bump because it conveys useful information.
Not with that attitude.
Misunderstanding, my bad.