The MCYT creator with over 1.5 million followers has dropped fresh content around his long running fake cryptocurrency joke, turning player economies into prime trolling material and sending fans into a wave of nostalgic and excited reactions across X.
Minecraft content creators often build entire personas around chaotic SMP moments, but few jokes have the staying power of Schlattcoin. On April 16 a viral X post highlighted Jschlatt unveiling a brand new video centered on the concept, positioning it as a way to scam an entire server through fake crypto trading.
From SMPLive Classic to Current Servers
Schlattcoin began as a tongue in cheek cryptocurrency during the SMPLive era where Jschlatt would mint gold based tokens and convince other creators to buy in. The bit blended Minecraft trading mechanics with real world crypto parody, leading to hilarious failed deals, overpriced islands, and endless banter. Years later the joke still lands, especially when dropped into newer servers filled with creators who know the lore.
In the recent video Jschlatt revives the bit with updated flair, showing the minting process and early trades that quickly spiral into server wide economic disruption. Viewers familiar with his streams immediately connected it to ongoing QSMP activity where similar player run economies already exist.
Why Fans Cannot Stop Talking About It
- Longtime viewers flooded replies with clips from the original SMPLive streams
- Newer fans are diving into the lore and recreating coin textures for their own worlds
- Creators on the same servers are already joking about accepting or rejecting Schlattcoin payments
- The video has racked up rapid engagement with quotes predicting server wars over who controls the coin supply
What makes this stand out from typical Minecraft economy videos is the self aware absurdity. Jschlatt never pretends it is a serious project. Instead he leans into the ridiculousness, turning what could be a dry trading tutorial into pure entertainment. That approach consistently delivers the kind of shareable moments that keep MCYT communities alive.
As of now the video is circulating widely among Minecraft Twitter circles with users tagging friends who missed the original run. Whether this leads to an actual prolonged server economy or stays a one off bit, the immediate reaction proves the joke has not aged at all.
While that quote references the broader buzz, it captures how deeply some fans engage with these creator driven storylines. For Jschlatt the goal is rarely serious innovation. It is about creating scenarios where funny failures become content gold.








