Mojang, the developers behind Minecraft, have made big changes to its policies on companies being able to promote their products using Minecraft. It could make a video like this, depicting a Verizon cell phone, a thing of the past.
In a blog post titled âletâs talk about promotions in Minecraft,â Mojang said it wants to continue to âempower [Minecraftâs] community to make money from their creativityâ but isnât happy when an âunrelated product becomes the purpose of a Minecraft mod or server.â This is meant to curb some of this.
Specifically calling out ad agencies, corporations, non-profits and politicians, Mojang is clamping down on the fairly common practice of using Minecraftâs aesthetic as a promotional tool. Here are two scenarios that are now banned:
Build a Minecraft mod or server that promotes unrelated products in playable form; e.g., if you are a restaurant chain, you canât market your restaurant by releasing a mod that includes your restaurant built out of Minecraft blocks.
Build a Minecraft map or mod that markets a movie or TV show; e.g., if youâre a movie studio, you canât make a map that uses Minecraft blocks to build out the fictional world of the movie or its characters, and you canât make an official movie trailer out of gameplay footage from that map or mod.
And while fans are allowed to build whatever they want in Minecraft, even a virtual McDonalds, they cannot accept money from McDonalds in order to build it. Theyâre only allowed to make money from monetizing the video on YouTube.
The full set of guidelines are available here, but they would seem to ban videos like the one featured in the GIF above, in which popular Minecraft streamer CaptainSparklez worked with Verizon to build a working cell phone in-game:
In the videoâs description, it mentions itâs âsponsored by Verizon.â Though it doesnât outright say money exchanged hands between CaptainSparklez and Verizon, itâs likely. Given this video would seem to fall under Mojangâs idea of âcompanies or organisations that are using Minecraft to sell their products or promote their causes,â CaptainSparklez couldnât publish this video anymore.
Mojang didnât respond to my request for comment or clarification on this.
Though the world might not miss a Minecraft cell phone gimmick, there are tons of creatives who make their living (or part of it) by using Minecraft as an art tool. Fans immediately started worrying about their favorite artists when Mojang published this tweet today, wondering if a source of income was disappearing.
https://twitter.com/embed/status/737683016928112641
SethBling also published a Verizon-sponsored Minecraft cell phone video
Dragnoz is a well-known Minecraft creator, having frequently collaborated with BlockWorks, a group dedicated to building massive worlds within Minecraft
One of those recent collaborations was visualizing Disneyâs Tomorrowland film:
The video was âcommissioned by Polaris on behalf of Disney.â
Though Dragnoz declined to comment to me, he issued one public response:
âThank you very much for everyone wishing me a peaceful rest,â they said on Twitter. âI have no plans on dying just yet :Pâ
A number of bigger Minecraft creators, including Blockworks, have not yet publicly commented on the changes. Polaris, a subsidiary of the Disney-owned Maker Studios, didnât respond to my request for comment, as of this writing.
Itâs possible many folks are waiting to see what the fallout of these changes truly are. Right now, thatâs a little unclear, and thatâs making people nervous.