ListMyServer.

Guide · 2026-05-12

How to find a private game server worth playing

A practical checklist for picking a private server — what to look for, what to avoid, and how to spot a dying community before you install anything.

Most private servers die within six months. The ones worth playing on share a handful of signals you can spot in five minutes. This guide is the short version.

The five-minute filter

Before you download a single file, check these:

  1. Listed player count vs. Discord activity. A server claiming “500 online” with a Discord ghost town is faking. Open the Discord, check #general — there should be human messages from the last hour.
  2. Last update / patch note. Active servers patch. Look for a changelog, news channel, or pinned post dated within the last 30 days.
  3. Owner is visible. Real owners post in their own Discord. Anonymous “@owner” accounts that never speak = bad sign.
  4. Rules document exists and is specific. “No cheating, be nice” is a copy-paste. Real servers have rules tailored to their game and mode.
  5. Join URL or IP works. If the server is offline when you check, it’s offline a lot.

Match the server to how you actually play

The single biggest reason people quit a private server in week one is mismatch. Be honest about what you want:

Region matters more than you think

A 200ms ping ruins PvP and degrades even survival builds. Filter by region first. Most ListMyServer listings tag EU, NA-East, NA-West, OCE, SA, or Asia. If a server doesn’t say its region, ping it before committing.

Red flags

Good signals

What to do once you’ve picked one

  1. Join the Discord first; lurk for an hour.
  2. Read the rules.
  3. Make a character / spawn in.
  4. Give it three sessions, not one. First impressions on private servers can be misleading because populations move with EU/NA prime time.

Where to start browsing

Running a server yourself? Read how to submit.

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