In the brutal, 24/7 world of Travian , where alliances crumble overnight and thousands of hours of resource management can be erased by a single well-timed catapult strike, there exists a force more powerful than any maxed-out Gaul defender or Roman legionnaire. This force is not a player. It is the Multihunter (often abbreviated as MH ).
So the next time you see a suspicious player with perfect 24/7 activity and a suspicious trade pattern, hit that report button. And then go back to building your crannies. Because somewhere in the server logs, a Multihunter is already watching.
To the average player, the Multihunter is a myth, a rumored specter that only appears as a red system message or a sudden, inexplicable account ban. To the cheater, they are the grim reaper. To the honest farmer, they are the silent, unseen guardians of fairness. A Multihunter is a volunteer (or, in the early days of the game, a paid staff member) appointed by Travian Games to enforce the game’s Terms of Service (ToS) and Rules of Conduct . They are not players competing for the endgame wonder—they are neutral arbiters.
In the brutal, 24/7 world of Travian , where alliances crumble overnight and thousands of hours of resource management can be erased by a single well-timed catapult strike, there exists a force more powerful than any maxed-out Gaul defender or Roman legionnaire. This force is not a player. It is the Multihunter (often abbreviated as MH ).
So the next time you see a suspicious player with perfect 24/7 activity and a suspicious trade pattern, hit that report button. And then go back to building your crannies. Because somewhere in the server logs, a Multihunter is already watching. travian multihunter
To the average player, the Multihunter is a myth, a rumored specter that only appears as a red system message or a sudden, inexplicable account ban. To the cheater, they are the grim reaper. To the honest farmer, they are the silent, unseen guardians of fairness. A Multihunter is a volunteer (or, in the early days of the game, a paid staff member) appointed by Travian Games to enforce the game’s Terms of Service (ToS) and Rules of Conduct . They are not players competing for the endgame wonder—they are neutral arbiters. In the brutal, 24/7 world of Travian ,