Minecraft has launched its first affiliate program in partnership with impact.com, giving approved creators, publishers, educators, and Minecraft Marketplace partners a new way to earn from Marketplace product sales.
The program turns Minecraft’s creator activity into a more formal performance channel. Instead of relying only on creator promotion, brand awareness, or community reach, Minecraft can now track partner-driven sales through affiliate links, reporting tools, and commission-based rewards.
The Minecraft Affiliate Program gives approved partners unique tracking links to eligible Marketplace content. When a user clicks a link and makes a qualifying purchase, the partner earns a commission.
To keep the initial rollout focused on Minecraft's active creator ecosystem, the program distinguishes between core community content and platform services:

Because Minecraft content is highly decentralized, the program allows links to be deployed across almost any digital channel:
| Channel Type | Example Formats |
|---|---|
| Social & Video | YouTube/TikTok video descriptions, link-in-bio pages, QR codes on streams |
| Written Content | Websites, blogs, reviews, newsletters, and resource guides |
| Communities | Education blogs, gaming forums, and creator storefronts |
This setup gives scattered channels a shared commercial structure. For affiliates, it creates a clearer route between content recommendation and revenue. For Minecraft, it provides a cleaner way to measure which partners are driving Marketplace sales.
Managing a creator ecosystem as large and decentralized as Minecraft’s requires clear tracking, reporting, attribution, and partner controls. impact.com already plays a growing role in creator partnership tracking, including its work as a launch partner for YouTube’s Creator Partnerships API, and now brings that same performance infrastructure into Minecraft’s first affiliate program.
Instead of building tracking tools from scratch, Minecraft uses impact.com to manage key parts of the program:
Minecraft’s ecosystem extends beyond traditional affiliate publishers, bringing several partner types into the same program. Because impact.com can accommodate diverse promotional styles under one roof, Minecraft can track entirely different use cases simultaneously:
Without this infrastructure, these diverse efforts blur into vague “brand awareness.” With impact.com, Minecraft can attach sales data to specific partners and campaigns, giving the company a clearer view of which channels drive Marketplace purchases.
Minecraft already has a huge creator ecosystem. Players watch builds, tutorials, challenges, Marketplace showcases, mod reviews, and survival series across YouTube, TikTok, Twitch, and other platforms. The affiliate program doesn’t create that behavior. It gives it a measurable commercial layer.
That matters for affiliate marketers because creator activity and affiliate marketing keep moving closer together. A creator mention can drive interest, but tracked links show which content helps move users toward a purchase. For Minecraft, the program connects community influence with Marketplace sales. For partners, it creates a monetization route that fits into the content they already make.
For example:
The mechanics are simple: creators promote eligible products, users click tracked links, and Minecraft gets clearer performance data.
The bigger point is that more brands want creator partnerships that go beyond flat fees and broad engagement metrics, especially when affiliate programs can connect creator activity to clearer performance data.
Minecraft’s affiliate launch shows how gaming brands can bring creator monetization closer to affiliate marketing without stripping away the content formats that made creators valuable in the first place.
Creators still need room to make videos, guides, reviews, tutorials, and community content in their own style. Brands still need tracking, partner controls, reporting, and payout systems. Minecraft now has both pieces in one program.
For affiliate and creator marketers, the signal feels clear enough: creator reach alone won’t satisfy every brand team anymore. More programs will ask creators to show sales impact through tracked links, dashboards, and partner terms. In Minecraft’s case, that starts with Marketplace add-ons, maps, skins, textures, mini-games, and survival spawns. A familiar creator economy, now connected to affiliate performance.