By James Sterling | Freelance journalist and digital archivist specializing in the intersection of virtual spaces and real-world politics.
Banned by Dictators, Built in Minecraft: Inside the Uncensored Library the 7th Wonder of Cyberspace
Published on · ⏱ 11 min read · 🎮 Gaming · ✊ Human Rights · 🔓 Press Freedom
Somewhere inside one of the world's best-selling video games, a library stands that no government can burn down. It has marble columns, a dome nearly 300 metres wide, and shelves packed with journalism that's gotten reporters jailed, exiled, or worse. The Minecraft Uncensored Library is the most unexpected press-freedom project of the 21st century and five years in, it's still adding new rooms, including one for the United States.
This is the story of how Reporters Without Borders (RSF) turned a sandbox game beloved by ten-year-olds into a censor-proof archive of truth and why that matters more now than ever.
⚡ Quick Answer
The Uncensored Library is a Minecraft server and downloadable map built by RSF and BlockWorks, launched on March 12, 2020. It hosts banned journalism from countries including Russia, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Egypt, and the United States all inside a massive neoclassical building that's been visited over 1 million times and read 10 million times. You can access it free at visit.uncensoredlibrary.com (Java Edition only).
The Origin Story: Creepers vs. Censors
The problem RSF faced in 2019 was a classic activist's headache: how do you reach young people in countries where the internet is a surveillance state and independent journalism is a criminal offence? Social media? Blocked. Independent news websites? Blocked. VPNs? Criminalized in many places.
Then someone at DDB Germany RSF's longtime creative partner had the kind of idea that sounds absurd until it's genius: what about a video game?
Specifically, Minecraft the blocky, pixelated world-builder that Microsoft bought for $2.5 billion and which, at the time, boasted over 145 million active players a month. RSF noted that even in authoritarian states, Minecraft remained widely accessible governments that aggressively filtered news sites hadn't yet figured out how dangerous a block-building game could be.
Christian Mihr, then Managing Director of RSF Germany, framed the mission simply: "Young people grow up without being able to form their own opinions. By using Minecraft, the world's most popular computer game, as a medium, we give them access to independent information."
On March 12, 2020 the World Day Against Cyber Censorship the virtual doors swung open. The Uncensored Library was live, and the internet lost its collective mind.
How Does It Actually Work?
Here's where it gets delightfully nerdy. Minecraft has a native "book" mechanic — players can craft books in-game and write text in them, which other players can then read. RSF and DDB built a plugin that automatically converts standard Word documents into Minecraft book format, transcribing censored articles page by page. Each Minecraft page holds about 50 characters so a single journalistic article can span many "pages" across multiple in-game books.
Those books sit on stands inside the library. Players walk up, click, and read. The content is read-only on the server no one can edit or destroy the books. Arabic-language articles, which require connected letterforms that Minecraft's Unicode system can't handle, are cleverly presented as audio files instead.
The library can be accessed two ways: join the live server at visit.uncensoredlibrary.com, or download the map for completely offline reading. That offline option is particularly smart once downloaded, users can share the map file, creating copies that spread like a virus even governments can't vaccinate against. According to DDB Senior Art Director Sandro Heierli, over 200,000 copies of the map had already been redistributed making it impossible to fully take down, even if RSF wanted to.
And while it started as a Java Edition exclusive, the reach is undeniable: since opening in 2020, the library has been visited over 1 million times, with its books read more than 10 million times.
12.5 Million Blocks of Truth: The Architecture
Let's take a second to appreciate the sheer absurdity and beauty of what was built here. A team of 24 builders from 16 countries spent over 250 collective hours constructing the library over three months. The structure uses more than 12.5 million Minecraft blocks each block representing a cubic metre in real-world scale. The main dome stretches nearly 300 metres wide, which would make it the second largest dome on Earth if it existed physically.
The design is intentionally neoclassical pillars, grand archways, the visual language of authority and permanence. It evokes the New York Public Library and the Library of Congress. This isn't accidental. The architecture is political. It signals to anyone who steps inside: this is a serious place, this information is legitimate, and it belongs here.
Inside, each country's wing has its own distinct symbolic design. The Russia wing has a brooding pool of water with an octopus lurking beneath a reference to state surveillance extending its tentacles everywhere. Vietnam's hall is a "labyrinth of truth," representing the increasing complexity of navigating anti-press operations. The Saudi Arabia section features a cage. Mexico's wing contains memorials for twelve journalists killed for their reporting.
The grand entrance dome has a world map with each country colour-coded by its Press Freedom Index ranking, with the flags of all 180 countries hanging above. It's the only place in Minecraft where you can walk into a building and immediately understand the global state of human rights in five minutes.
Official fly-through: "Minecraft: Building The Uncensored Library" — BlockWorks (YouTube, 2020).
Who's Inside? The Journalists and Their Stories
The library currently covers journalism from ten countries plus a dedicated RSF wing: Egypt, Mexico, Russia, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Belarus, Iran, Eritrea, and the United States. The selection wasn't random. RSF cross-referenced countries with high scores on the Press Freedom Index — meaning bad press freedom situations — against Google data showing high Minecraft usage in those same countries. You want reach? Go where the players are.
The journalists represented span the full tragic spectrum of what happens to people who report truth to power:
| Journalist | Country | What Happened |
|---|---|---|
| Jamal Khashoggi | Saudi Arabia | Murdered by Saudi agents in Istanbul, 2018 |
| Javier Valdez | Mexico | Shot dead reporting on cartel activity, 2017 |
| Nguyen Van Dai | Vietnam | Sentenced to 15 years; later released into exile |
| Elahe Mohammadi | Iran | Imprisoned for covering Mahsa Amini's funeral |
| MadaMasr (editorial team) | Egypt | Website blocked since 2017; reporters arrested |
As of the most recent update, the library holds around 300 books across twelve wings. Each text is available in English and the journalist's native language. RSF obtains permission from writers or their estates before including any work, and takes careful steps to ensure that participating journalists most of whom are already in exile aren't placed in additional danger.
James Sterling: I first logged into the Uncensored Library expecting a novelty. What I didn't expect was to feel genuinely moved standing in a video game. Walking into the Iran wing and reading Elahe Mohammadi's account of Evin Prison written in blocky Minecraft text on a virtual book stand is surreal in a way that somehow makes the horror more real, not less. There's something about the incongruity this playful, colourful game engine rendering testimony about solitary confinement that strips away all the distance we normally put between ourselves and terrible news. I found myself sitting still for a long time after I closed the game. That's the design working exactly as intended.
The New US Room: When Democracies Censor Too
Here's the twist that made headlines in March 2025: RSF opened a new wing for the United States. Not because the US is comparable to North Korea or Eritrea it isn't. But because press freedom isn't a binary thing, and its erosion in democracies is a different, subtler kind of threat.
RSF explains that the US room documents government websites deleted by federal authorities, analyses of FCC pressure on media companies, and Trump administration lawsuits against outlets. It even contains a political cartoon by Pulitzer Prize winner Ann Telnaes the one showing Jeff Bezos kneeling before Donald Trump that the Washington Post refused to publish, sparking a major debate about editorial independence.
The point RSF is making, quietly but unmistakably, is this: the mechanisms of censorship don't require a dictator. They just require enough pressure applied in the right places. The Uncensored Library puts that argument in a medium where teenagers in Houston can stand next to teenagers in Hanoi and read about it together. Not bad for a block-building game.
Why Minecraft? The Genius of the Loophole
There's a strategic elegance to the Minecraft choice that deserves unpacking. RSF and DDB cross-referenced two data sets: countries ranked worst on the Press Freedom Index, and countries with the highest Minecraft player populations (sourced from Google Analytics). The overlap was startling. Nations aggressively filtering the open web were still allowing a kids' game to run freely.
The distribution model is also brilliant. The map can be downloaded and shared peer-to-peer. Once it's out in the world, no single server takedown can stop it. And the map's viral spread through YouTube prominent Minecraft YouTubers explored the library to audiences of millions meant the project reached people who'd never heard of Reporters Without Borders and probably still haven't.
In 2024 alone, the Uncensored Library project website attracted around 200,000 visitors, with the Minecraft map downloaded approximately 80,000 times and over 336,500 texts read offline. The largest audiences came from the USA, Germany, India, Russia, Brazil, and Mexico which is fascinating, since several of those countries have their own wings in the library.
There's also something philosophically fitting about it. Minecraft is fundamentally a game about building things that persist. You place a block; it stays. In a world where authoritarian governments are very good at making things disappear, choosing a medium defined by permanence is a statement in itself.
Awards, Recognition, and Going Viral
The project exploded across media the moment it launched. Coverage came from the BBC, CNN, AFP, TechCrunch, The Verge, Gizmodo, PC Gamer a remarkable coalition of outlets ranging from mainstream news to gaming press, which is exactly the cross-pollination RSF was hoping for.
In 2022, the Uncensored Library won a Peabody Award in the Interactive category. The Peabody judges described it as "a monument to press freedom and an innovative back door for access to censored content." That framing monument is worth sitting with. They're not calling it a workaround or a trick. They're calling it architecture.
The Peabody citation noted that the library had allowed more than 20 million gamers to access censored articles. The project also received coverage in the official Minecraft 15th Anniversary book in 2024 cementing its place in the game's cultural history.
Yulia Berezovskaia, editor-in-chief of the Russian opposition outlet grani.ru, put it with the kind of clarity that only someone who has lived under censorship can manage: "The only real way of fighting censorship is sharing and spreading what has been censored."
The Uncensored Library is that sentence made into architecture.
How to Visit the Uncensored Library
Visiting is straightforward, but there are a couple of things to know:
- You need Minecraft: Java Edition. The library hasn't been ported to Bedrock Edition due to Marketplace distribution limitations. Java Edition is available for PC/Mac.
-
Option A — Online server: Launch Minecraft Java Edition and connect to the server address
visit.uncensoredlibrary.com. Free to join, no whitelist. - Option B — Download offline: Visit uncensoredlibrary.com and download the world file. Load it in your single-player world list. Works without internet once downloaded.
- Share the map. This is encouraged. The more copies that exist, the more resilient the project becomes. Share it the same way you'd share any Minecraft world file.
One important limitation: as of 2020, there were no plans to bring the library to Bedrock Edition. Console players are unfortunately out of luck for now.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I access the Uncensored Library in Minecraft?
You need Minecraft: Java Edition on PC or Mac. Connect to the live server at visit.uncensoredlibrary.com, or download the offline world map for free at uncensoredlibrary.com. Both options are free. The library is not available on Bedrock Edition or consoles.
Which countries' journalism is featured in the Uncensored Library?
As of 2025, the library has dedicated wings for Egypt, Mexico, Russia, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Belarus, Iran, Eritrea, and the United States, plus a central RSF wing. Each country's section was selected based on poor press freedom rankings cross-referenced with high Minecraft player populations.
Is the Uncensored Library still active in 2025?
Yes — actively so. RSF opened a brand-new US room in March 2025, added fresh content to the Egypt, Belarus, Russia, and Iran wings, and reported over 1 million total visits and 10 million book reads since launch. The library continues to be updated regularly.
Has the Uncensored Library won any awards?
Yes. In 2022, it won a Peabody Award in the Interactive category, with judges calling it "a monument to press freedom and an innovative back door for access to censored content." It was also featured in the official Minecraft 15th Anniversary book in 2024 and was covered by the BBC, CNN, TechCrunch, and The Verge at launch.
Can governments block the Minecraft Uncensored Library?
It's very difficult. The offline map can be downloaded and shared peer-to-peer, creating copies that spread independently. Over 200,000 copies had already been redistributed early on, making a complete takedown essentially impossible. Some countries block Minecraft entirely, which is the main limitation — but most haven't gone that far.
The Bottom Line
The Minecraft Uncensored Library is not a gimmick. It's one of the most creative acts of civil resistance of the internet age, dressed in the least threatening packaging imaginable. Five years in, it keeps growing, keeps adding journalists, keeps finding readers in the exact countries that would rather they never read a word of it.
If you have Minecraft Java Edition and haven't visited yet, do it. Not because it's a curiosity because it's genuinely important, and because 10 million book reads means it's working, and you can be part of that.
And the next time someone tells you video games are a waste of time, feel free to tell them about the 300-metre Minecraft dome that authoritarian governments can't tear down.
Ready to visit?
Connect to visit.uncensoredlibrary.com in Minecraft Java Edition, or download the free map at uncensoredlibrary.com.
Visit the Uncensored Library →📚 Sources & References
- RSF Opens "The Uncensored Library" — Reporters Without Borders, March 2020
- RSF Unveils New US Room in the Uncensored Library — RSF, March 2025
- The Uncensored Library — Wikipedia
- RSF's Uncensored Library Uses Minecraft to Provide Access to Censored Work — Library Journal, April 2022
- Minecraft Library Provides a Safe Haven for Press Freedom — Dezeen, August 2021
- The Uncensored Library — The Peabody Awards, 2022
- Expanding the Peabody Awards — American University, 2022
- 5 Years of Gaming the [Censorship] System — InOldNews, May 2025
- Uncensored Library — Minecraft.net, 2023



























































