EnderDash exists because Minecraft admins deserve better than a generic hosting panel.

We're building for operators managing Paper, Velocity, BungeeCord, and everything in between. One place to run the work that happens every day, without caring where the server is hosted.

Why this product needed to exist

Most of the frustration is not dramatic. It is the slow drain of doing the same operational work across too many disconnected tools.

Missing plugin updates. Digging through logs in the wrong place. Adding subusers in multiple hosting dashboards. Trying to explain a crash in Discord with screenshots of console output. EnderDash is an attempt to collapse that operational mess into one panel.

Panel sprawl

One host for survival, another for proxy, a third place for logs, and no shared context between them.

Team work without shared tooling

Admins end up copying commands, screenshots, and console fragments into chat because the panel is not built for collaboration.

Minecraft-specific work forced through generic tools

Plugin upkeep, permissions, and crash investigation deserve more than a generic VPS control panel.

Built around the stack Minecraft admins already run

Works with the hosts, runtimes, and integrations you already use.

Paper
Velocity
Purpur
Folia
Bukkit
Spigot
FlameCord
BungeeCord
Docker
Podman
Kubernetes
PufferPanel
Pterodactyl
Pelican
Portainer
Linux
Windows
macOS
Raspberry Pi
Hetzner
OVH
Reliablesite
Vultr
Contabo
DigitalOcean
Linode
Bloom Host
Sparked Host
Apex Hosting
Shockbyte Hosting
PebbleHost
BisectHosting
LuckPerms
mclo.gs
pastes.dev

What we build for

The ideas that shape every feature we ship.

Operations before ornament

Every screen should help admins act, not just look busy.

Minecraft-aware workflow

Console output, plugins, permissions, and proxies are first-class concepts instead of afterthoughts.

Team access that makes sense

Owners, moderators, editors, and support staff should not all need the same level of access.

AI as an operator assistant

Ocelot should investigate, summarize, and prepare changes while staying inside clear approval boundaries.

If you run Minecraft infrastructure, EnderDash should feel immediately familiar.

The goal is not to invent a new workflow. It is to give the existing one a single, usable home.