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Rules

Last Updated: 5-23-26
  1. No spam or solicitations in the message center. This applies whether the conversation started from a housing listing, a Streammate Post, or a Sponsor Post.
  2. Contextually outline what is included in rooms. We allow postings of rooms with existing furniture and odds and ends, but you must explicitly state what comes with the room upon move-in.
  3. Contextually outline what comes with living spaces. That colonial Boston couch may look nice, but if your co-streamer is not allowed to have their dog on it, you should stipulate such.
  4. Make listings and what you are asking per month clear. Be sure to include wording such as “utilities are included” or “utility costs are shared.”
  5. Be exhaustive about all expenses. Moving takes many considerations, both financial and lifestyle. Refrain from tacking on expenses or bills that are not outlined in your post.
  6. No corporate or irrelevant housing opportunities. This website is meant for video game streamers to find living arrangements with other streamers. We do allow individuals who are looking to become streamers to rent out rooms or houses.
  7. No application fee or credit check fee may be imposed on prospective tenants. Due to the abundance of rental scams where scammers post fake rental opportunities, this is not allowed.
  8. You may only post if you are the property owner or have full clearance from whoever the property owner is.
  9. Only post rooms that are fit for habitation. If a garage, attic, or other space is not legally permissible for habitation, it may not be posted here.
  10. Percentage income listings are allowed. You may opt to not charge rent and instead request a percentage of the other streamer’s income.
  11. Postings do not have to include a rental amount, but you must convey monetary or performance expectations. For example, you could say: “No cash rental amount, but I receive 50% of income from the partnership.”
  12. For Streammate Posts, be honest about your channel. Your subscriber count, average viewership, platforms streamed on, and the games you actually play should reflect reality. The other streamer is deciding whether to spend time collaborating with you based on what you say.
  13. Keep your Streammate Post current. If you switch the games you stream or stop streaming on a platform you previously listed, update your post.
  14. Honor scheduling commitments. If you and a Streammate agree to a session, show up — or give as much notice as possible if something comes up. No-shows hurt the other streamer’s schedule and audience too.
  15. Discuss content ownership before you go live. Who keeps the VOD, whether either party can upload clips, and how credit is given in titles and descriptions should be settled in advance, not after the fact.
  16. Get consent before recording or sharing another streamer’s voice, webcam, or gameplay. Do not reuse another streamer’s footage in your own content without their okay.
  17. Keep collaborations PG by default. Unless both parties explicitly agree otherwise in advance, assume the content will be family-friendly. Don't surprise your Streammate with content that could harm their channel.
  18. No fake-collab schemes. Do not use Streammate Posts to inflate follower counts, run view-botting arrangements, or trade subs and follows. Authentic collaboration only.
  19. Respect a “no.” If another streamer declines to collaborate, do not repeatedly message them, create alt accounts to reach them, or pursue them on other platforms.
  20. For Sponsor Posts, represent your audience accurately. Your follower count, average viewers, engagement, and audience demographics must reflect reality. Inflated numbers will lead to removal and may be treated as fraud if a sponsorship results from them.
  21. Only post channels you actually own. You may not list another streamer’s channel, a channel you co-manage without permission, or a channel you’ve recently acquired without confirming ownership.
  22. Disclose sponsored content. When a sponsorship lands, follow FTC disclosure rules and the disclosure rules of the platform you stream on (for example, “#ad,” “Includes paid promotion,” or a verbal disclosure on stream). This is your responsibility, not ours.
  23. Do not solicit prohibited sponsorships. Sponsor Posts may not seek sponsorship for adult content, illegal products, content directed at minors, MLM or pyramid schemes, “pay for positive review” arrangements, or any sponsorship that requires undisclosed endorsement.
  24. Do not sell your channel. Sponsor Posts are for connecting with sponsors — they may not be used to sell, rent, or transfer access to your channel or audience.
  25. Get sponsorship deals in writing before producing content. We cannot help you recover unpaid fees or undelivered products. A written agreement covering deliverables, payment, timing, and exclusivity should be in place before you go live with sponsored content.
  26. Vet your sponsors. We do not verify brands that contact you through a Sponsor Post. Confirm the company is real, ask for references from streamers they have worked with before, and never share login credentials, banking information, or signed contracts with anyone you have not independently verified.
  27. Honor your commitments. If you agree to a sponsorship, deliver what you promised. Reputation issues in this space follow you across the platform.

Material may exist in the Terms of Use that does not appear in these Rules. Such material also acts as binding rules.