CreeperHost offers the tools you need to run your dream TenSura (That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime) server!
Host your TenSura (That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime) server
TenSura (Reincarnated as a Slime) Server Hosting (Multiplayer-First)
TenSura (Reincarnated as a Slime) shines when it’s a shared world: party up, push progression together, and build something persistent that your group can return to any time. CreeperHost can run this modpack on our paid modded Minecraft hosting infrastructure, so you get a stable always-on server without turning someone’s PC into the “server machine.”
Why host this modpack on CreeperHost?
- Always online for your group — no waiting for a friend to boot a PC (or keep it running overnight).
- Resources that match “extra large” packs — modded combat, structures, and progression can overwhelm casual hosting quickly.
- Smoother exploration — dedicated CPU time helps when multiple players generate new chunks at once.
- Built for ongoing updates — one-click modpack installs/updates while keeping your settings intact.
- Less “server admin by accident” — simple controls for configs, restarts, and troubleshooting when things get weird.
High-Level Overview
TenSura (Reincarnated as a Slime) is a fantasy adventure-RPG experience inspired by That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, built around character progression, skills, and dangerous encounters. It’s a pack that rewards groups who like to roam, fight, and develop a shared base or settlement—then head back out for the next challenge.
If your server’s vibe is “co-op progression with big moments,” this fits well: players can specialize, support each other, and keep the world moving forward even when not everyone is online at the same time.
What multiplayer groups typically enjoy most
- A clear sense of progression (your character grows with you)
- Exploration that matters (new areas bring new threats and rewards)
- A home base loop (build up, gear up, head out again)
Hosting Considerations for TenSura (Reincarnated as a Slime)
Modpacks in the “extra large” category tend to behave differently than lighter kitchen-sink packs—even when your player count looks modest. Here’s what we commonly see when hosting progression-heavy RPG packs like this:
Memory and stability expectations
- Plan for higher RAM headroom than vanilla or light modpacks. As your world grows, so do server-side allocations for entities, structures, and player data.
- Most groups run happiest when they avoid “bare minimum” RAM settings; extra headroom reduces hitching during busy moments (events, base activity, or travel).
CPU and world generation
- Exploration is often the biggest spike. When multiple players head in different directions, chunk generation becomes a real workload.
- If your group likes to roam freely, you’ll benefit from strong single-thread performance (still a key factor in Minecraft server tick speed).
Configuration and “pack hygiene”
- Servers usually need a bit of tuning over time: view-distance, simulation-distance, and occasional spawn/AI pressure adjustments.
- Regular restarts (on a schedule) are a simple way to keep long-running modded servers feeling fresh and responsive.
Why CreeperHost is a Strong Fit
Before you even think about tuning, the right platform makes the difference—especially for larger Forge packs.
Hardware that’s proven for modded Minecraft
CreeperHost runs modded servers on liquid-cooled Ryzen, EPYC, and Intel Ultra-based infrastructure with a focus on the consistent CPU performance that Minecraft servers actually need. That matters most when combat gets chaotic or exploration ramps up.
Modpack-friendly management (without breaking your setup)
- One-click modpack installation and updates designed to preserve your config changes, so updates don’t feel like a wipe-and-pray process.
- GUI-based mod and config management for the practical tasks you’ll actually do: adjusting settings, adding a server-side utility mod, or checking logs.
Built for real multiplayer uptime
With DDoS protection, operational reliability, and over 13 years of experience hosting large modded communities, you get a host that’s used to the realities of big packs: unexpected lag spikes, update days, and the ever-present “why is the server tick time climbing?”
If you tell us your expected player count and playstyle (builders vs. explorers vs. constant combat), we can recommend a starting size that feels good now—and won’t box you in later.
