Roblox to Revamp Advertising Policies and Launch Revenue Sharing by 2027

Roblox to Revamp Advertising Policies and Launch Revenue Sharing by 2027

Synopsis

Roblox said on Friday it would take a portion ​of revenue from in-game ​brand deals starting next year, as part of a ​broader advertising-policy overhaul designed to draw in more brand dollars and increase creator earnings.
Videogame platform Roblox said on Friday it would take a portion of revenue from in-game brand deals starting next year, as part of a broader advertising-policy overhaul designed to draw in more brand dollars and increase creator earnings.

The company has been expanding beyond gaming to transform its platform into a ‌hub for ⁠ecommerce, ⁠socializing and advertising, and had announced a new ad format and a partnership with Google last year to grow its nascent ad business.

The revenue share, effective ​January 2027, aims to end what Roblox called a "race to the bottom" on pricing caused by a lack of standardised measurement and ​price transparency, according to a post on its ⁠developer forum ‌on Friday.

"A revenue share that scales like media will help brands report, measure and value advertising integrations in ⁠a similar way to other scaled media formats on other platforms. Today, the flat fee deal structures leave creators earning less, not more," Roblox said.

It is still finalizing details with creators and would share more in the second quarter.

The company also said starting May 4, age-appropriate advertising formats would be permitted on its platform.

"Content will now be classified as an ‌ad if it involves compensation from a brand to feature within a creator's experience, or if it promotes ​off-platform products," it ​said.

Under the framework, ⁠creators will be required to register all advertising integrations with Roblox before campaigns go live, and submit assets for moderation. It will also ​introduce new advertising labels applied directly in its Studio tool, allowing users to report unwanted ads.

Roblox said rewarded advertising formats and certain brand categories, including food, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and financial services, would be prohibited for users under the age of 13.