Each game's moderator(s) has to set up which name their game has on Twitch. If they don't do this, no streams will show.
@GoldGamer32 Probably a combination of Twitch not distinguishing between Java Edition and Bedrock edition and your most recent Twitch videos not having Minecraft selected as the game. It's also possible the MC:BE moderators haven't set up the leaderboards to recognize any streams at all.
Make sure the "Use as sub-category" option under the variable is not selected.
It's typically accepted. You'd have to edit a timer onto the video after the fact.
The answer to this is going to differ by community, since each game community sets its own rules. That said, this console uses FPGA, which is a good sign.
@FalcoDash107 Consider using OBS, which is completely free without limitations.
...why would recording time even be limited because of COVID-19???
It looks like your friend already made a post on the game's forum page. Pretty interesting!
You may want to aim your question to the game's forum page or Discord server. Third place isn't impossible to reach, it'll just require lots of time and dedication on your part.
@Timmiluvs A quick search reveals the bot is copying this post from four years ago.
Keep in mind that most leaderboards don't require you to have a timer in the video, since human-controlled timers will always be inaccurate and are mostly for convenience's sake. An accidentally paused timer shouldn't stop you from submitting a run (in ideal circumstances).
Interesting "1 hours" display bug - on the main Forums page, the "Streaming / Recording / Equipment" row displays "1 hours" values in the "Last post" column. Contrast this with the lower "The Site" row, where this does not occur. This doesn't seem to occur on said forum subpage either.
@Gtbot2007 That's not how submissions work on this site: there's a list of criteria which includes the point that "Non-Video-Game Activities" are not allowed. Getting lots of people to try submitting this will only make the site moderators' lives difficult.
By all means feel free to track it by yourself, but I'm afraid most people just aren't going to take these runs seriously.
Events like game jams might be a little similar to this concept, since they task individuals and teams with making the best games they can in fixed time limits.