[Speaking as a mod]
I won't remove this post, as different realisations for /æ/ is an on-topic subject.
However, I'd like to ask users here to present information in a way that is conductive to discussion, and a bit more in-depth than just a video showing transcriptions of a bunch of Hermitcraft players saying "sand", OK? Put a bit more effort on the post, please, this would be a damn great post if you highlighted how those different pronunciations are spread across English speakers.
GoodTimesWithScar's /æ/-tensing. The phenomenon is messy, as it depends on the dialect and the phonetic environment of the vowel, but before /n/ most speakers of North American dialects would realise /æ/ like he did, [ɛə̯]. Another example of the same phenomenon would be Etho, who's from Canada.
GoodTimesWithScar's regressive nasalisation. The video transcribes it accurately as ranging from the start of the diphthong, not just near the end; that hints that, at least in his dialect, vowel nasalisation is already phonologised.
MumboJumbo's [h]. I think that he's being cheeky and playing with how others pronounce the word; do note however that /æ/-tensing is not common in the UK, where he's from.