CreeperHost offers the tools you need to run your dream Horrors, guns and more server!
Host your Horrors, guns and more server
Horrors, guns and more Server Hosting (CreeperHost)
Horrors, guns and more is built for tense multiplayer: exploring hostile worlds, running missions with modern firearms, and escalating into bigger threats once your group is geared up. If you want the experience to feel smooth—especially when players spread out, generate new terrain, and start fighting in different areas—this is a modpack that benefits from being hosted on CreeperHost’s paid server infrastructure rather than someone’s spare PC.
- Keep combat smooth under pressure with stable, high-performance hardware suited to modded tick load.
- One-click install & updates while preserving your config changes—ideal for packs that evolve as you play.
- Self-hosting hits limits fast when multiple players explore and trigger world generation at once.
- Casual hosting struggles with memory spikes from big mod lists, new chunks, and lots of entities in combat.
- Built-in tooling to diagnose lag so you can fix TPS drops without guesswork.
High-level overview
This is a Forge modpack for Minecraft 1.20.1 that blends horror elements with military-themed progression—guns, vehicles, and heavier combat options—plus additional exploration content through structures and world variety.
In practice, it plays best as a server where your group can:
- push further from spawn and uncover new areas together
- prepare loadouts and supplies for high-risk exploration
- tackle “things that hunt you” with coordinated firepower rather than solo scrambling
Why CreeperHost fits this pack
Before you even think about tuning, what matters most is consistency: horror encounters and gunplay feel dramatically better when the server isn’t stuttering.
CreeperHost is a strong match here because you get:
- Hybrid VPS performance with the stability you want for always-on modded worlds
- Ryzen / EPYC / Intel Ultra-based, liquid-cooled servers designed around the realities of modded Minecraft loads
- Control-panel mod & config management for the inevitable “add a server-side mod” or “tweak a setting” moments
- Operational reliability + DDoS protection, especially helpful if your server is public or shared beyond close friends
Hosting Considerations for Horrors, guns and more
Modpacks that combine combat-heavy content, entity activity, and exploration/world generation tend to behave in predictable ways on servers:
Memory and startup expectations
It’s common for larger Forge packs to need more memory headroom than vanilla—especially once the world has been explored, multiple players are online, and new areas are being generated. If you’re migrating from a single-player mindset, the most noticeable difference is that servers should be sized for worst-case moments, not average moments.
Tick load during combat and exploration
Expect performance pressure to spike when:
- players split up and load multiple areas at once
- lots of mobs/entities are active in separate regions
- bases accumulate machines, storage, mobs, and “living” defenses over time
This isn’t unique to this pack—it’s simply how modded servers behave when content encourages movement, combat, and frequent chunk loading.
World size and long-term maintenance
Exploration-focused servers tend to grow quickly. Over time, you’ll typically want sensible operational habits (periodic backups, occasional cleanup, and keeping an eye on view/simulation distances) so the world stays responsive as it expands.
Getting the best multiplayer experience
If your goal is a server that feels fair and responsive:
- Keep group activities coordinated during big exploration sessions (fewer “everyone in a different direction” moments).
- Add players gradually and observe performance after major progression milestones.
- Use CreeperHost’s lag-diagnosis tooling when TPS dips—most issues are identifiable once you can see what’s consuming tick time.
When you’re ready, you can deploy Horrors, guns and more on CreeperHost and focus on surviving the night—without the server becoming the scariest part of the experience.
