Skip to main content

Minecraft tops 200 million sales as it dominates the YouTube charts

While Animal Crossing: New Horizons might be the hottest video game of the pandemic, Minecraft is hitting some significant milestones as well.

Sales of the 11-year old game have topped 200 million copies, Microsoft said Monday in a blog post. Even more impressive, 126 million people are currently playing Minecraft each month. The news comes as part of the game’s birthday celebration on May 17.

Minecraft is even more popular on YouTube. In 2019, it was the most viewed game on the streaming site, Microsoft says. And that popularity is likely to see another spike later this month as Minecraft Dungeons is released on May 26. A free Nether update is coming to the base game this summer as well.

Microsoft has leaned in on Minecraft as people have been locked in their homes due to stay-at-home orders. As the coronavirus pandemic began to spread, the company made the Minecraft: Education Edition free to educators to help students stay engaged. It also launched the Minecraft Education Collection in the main game, incorporating content from some of the most popular Marketplace partners. Both services will remain free through the end of June.

Since March 24, there have been more than 50 million downloads of the free educational content.

Minecraft has also partnered with the United Nations Development Programme to share the World Health Organization’s coronavirus prevention guidance.

Editors' Recommendations

Chris Morris
Chris Morris has covered consumer technology and the video game industry since 1996, offering analysis of news and trends and…
Why you may still be missing ESPN and other Disney-owned channels on YouTube TV
YouTube TV on Roku.

ESPN, ABC, FX, and other channels owned by Disney have returned to YouTube TV. But if you reorder your live listings so that the channels you actually watch are higher up than the ones you don't, you likely don't see those channels at all.

The problem is a bit of a glitch in that not only have the channels in question been pushed to the bottom of the listings in the custom view -- they're actually not even enabled in the first place. And that's not a new phenomenon. It's the way it has always worked when new channels are added to YouTube TV and you're using the custom sort, and so it makes sense (in a perverse, broken sort of way) that it's the case with the Disney-owned channels as they've been added back to YouTube TV.

Read more
YouTube TV couldn’t have picked a worse time to lose ESPN
best youtube tv alternatives alternative 5

There's never a good time for a streaming service to lose channels. Not for you, not for the service. But YouTube TV's potential loss of the Disney-owned channels -- which, among other things, comprises ABC, FX, ESPN, and of course, Disney -- could be devastating for what is believed to be the second-largest live TV streaming service in the United States, with more than 3 million subscribers at one point.

The linchpin in this sort of thing tends to be sports -- live events whose distribution rights command top dollar. The NFL may be what you think of first when it comes to the sort of thing, with any one of the usual suspects supposedly in the running to carry NFL Sunday Ticket, which lets anyone watch out-of-market games.

Read more
Google and Roku strike a deal to keep YouTube and YouTube TV on the platform
YouTube on Roku.

Google and Roku today announced that the two companies have reached a deal that will keep YouTube and YouTube TV on the No. 1 streaming platform in the United States and return the YouTube TV channel to the Roku Channel Store. Terms of the deal weren't disclosed, but it's good for multiple years.

Roku's Dallas Lawrence, head of comms for platform business, told Digital Trends via email: "Roku and Google have agreed to a multiyear extension for both YouTube and YouTube TV.  This agreement represents a positive development for our shared customers, making both YouTube and YouTube TV available for all streamers on the Roku platform."

Read more