![]() His skin was removed in Patch 1.67 due to people using the skin to troll others into thinking that Herobrine was in the game. Herobrine was once a playable skin on the Legacy Console editions of Minecraft within Skin Pack 1.The removed Herobrine patch notes no longer appear on Mojang's Changelogs starting with Version 1.17 and above.This confirmed there was no Herobrine, but suggested "Notch planned to add him at a later date". In reply to a tweet asking if Herobrine was a real entity in-game, Notch replied saying that he was not, but that there "might be soon". Notch posted on Twitter about the subject of Herobrine, early in his popularity boost.Herobrine has appeared in several official Mojang images as an in-joke.On 22 August 2012, Dinnerbone, current joint developer of Minecraft, tweeted "We have no plans at all to add herobrine. As Minecraft passed on from Notch to Jeb, the chance of Herobrine appearing in an update was unclear.However, this is also completely false in reality, as Notch does not have a brother. Herobrine is said to be Notch's dead brother, somehow embedded into Minecraft. ![]() This was a joke, referring to Notch partially removing the human mob's essential code, making it unspawnable within Minecraft. Herobrine was first stated to have been removed in Beta 1.6.6.Herobrine is a human entity, with the player skin of Steve but with bright white eyes that glow, as if they are a light source (compare with the eyes of endermen, spiders and cave spiders which appear brighter than their surroundings without actually emitting light). ![]() He is known to be one of the known icons in the early Minecraft days despite his existence being debunked. Herobrine is an alleged ghost that lurks within Minecraft. ![]() “ Fine, Herobrine is real, and he gains spooky vengeance haunting power whenever you remind me of him. ― Nearly every patch note for Minecraft, except 1.17. ![]() Minecraft Pocket Edition v0.10.4 alpha (PE)Minecraft Legacy Console Edition Character Icons Want to know more about Herobrine? Not To Be Confused With Vs. ![]()
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