Public-source research recorded in the current public-source research.
BUFF Game review: public evidence and unresolved risks
BUFF documents how its points and rewards work, but earning rates are modest and affiliate commissions remain hidden until application. Treat it as a background rewards app, not a dependable income source.
Prepared by the SkinRake Research Desk. Research date: . Account tested: No. Deposit or withdrawal tested: No.
Use this to decide whether the site fits the visitor's main search intent.
Cashout options can change by region, reward inventory, and account status.
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BUFF Game Screenshots
Public BUFF Game pages viewed on 2026-07-16. No account login was used.
Evidence-led assessment
BUFF (buff.game) is a free play-to-earn app that pays you points called 'Buffs' for playing games you already own, then lets you spend those points on gift cards, Steam keys and gaming gear. It's a rewards app, not a gambling site, and the public documentation is unusually good for this space — but the earnings are small and slow, and the numbers that matter most to an affiliate are locked behind an application.
This desk-researched profile is not a finding that the operator is legal, licensed, safe, or available in every country. It separates cited public information from account-only and transaction-only claims.
Public evidence supports a sourced profile; account-side terms and live cashier behavior remain untested unless explicitly stated.
What the public research covered
Public affiliate, partner, referral, or support page found. Exact rates may still be account-side.
Terms, FAQ, help, AML, KYC, license, or restricted-country source is linked in the research data.
Public complaint and reputation evidence is incomplete, so the trust assessment remains limited.
Public payment, fee, withdrawal, or cashout documentation is linked. This is not a transaction test.
No account was created, no forms were submitted, and no wager or deposit test was performed.
What BUFF is
There are no cases here, no crash, no roulette. BUFF is a play-to-earn rewards client: you install it, play supported games, and it hands out points called 'Buffs' based on your gameplay, which you later redeem for real items. The FAQ says it plainly — 'Buff is FREE to use' — and the marketing leans on being 'Ban-Safe' and 'Authorized by Overwolf. No malware. No mining.' If you landed here expecting a skin-gambling site, this isn't one.
One practical detail to get right before you install: it isn't a single cross-platform client. The desktop app runs through Overwolf and the FAQ lists Windows-only requirements (Windows 7 64-bit / 8 / 10, 50MB disk, 4GB RAM minimum). The homepage separately pushes 'Check Out Buff Mobile' and there's a Google Play listing under com.buff.play. Both are real and official, but they're two different apps — a Windows desktop overlay and a separate phone app — not one thing that follows you everywhere.
How you earn and what you can spend it on
BUFF advertises '1500+ Supported Games' and covers the obvious ones — CS2, Valorant, Fortnite, League of Legends, Dota 2, Minecraft, PUBG, Overwatch, Rocket League, Roblox and more. You earn Buffs by playing, then redeem them in a Marketplace for gift cards, Steam keys, gaming gear and Amazon credit. The captured pages show the exchange rate in concrete terms: a $10 Roblox Game Card runs 2,200 points, a $5 Riot Access Code runs 1,200. That gives you a rough feel for how many points a dollar of reward costs.
The FAQ says BUFF is available worldwide, but some Marketplace products are limited to U.S. residents. Store inventory can therefore differ by country, and a reward shown elsewhere may not be redeemable in a user's location.
The signup offer, and what the grind really pays
The homepage runs a 'Triple Welcome Bonus – 90 Buff Points Instead of 30' on a countdown timer. Read it as a time-limited promo, not a standing offer — the normal signup grant appears to be 30 points, and a countdown means it can lapse. Separately, the FAQ describes an in-app referral: share your link and you get 30 Buffs once a referred friend earns 30 Buffs from actual gameplay, excluding starting bonuses and challenges. So the referral only pays after your friend does real work, not just for signing up.
Third-party reviews report monthly earnings around $5 to $15 for active players, slow point accrual, rewards going out of stock, and occasional tracking or kill-count discrepancies. These are unverified user reports, not measured results. They describe pocket-money returns rather than an income claim.
The affiliate program (and a name not to confuse it with)
BUFF publishes an affiliate page at buff.game/affiliates-program, run on Everflow and aimed at streamers, influencers, networks, Discord owners and marketers. It advertises unlimited referrals, a unique referral link, payment per unique registration, and a dashboard for campaigns and payouts, with earnings varying by the referred user's region. The page is first-party documentation of the program, but it does not publish the actual payout rate before application.
What it won't tell you is the rate. The commission figures floating around our earlier research ($2.50 per US registration, $1 for EU/CA/MX/AU, $0.30 elsewhere) couldn't be confirmed on the public page or through search — they sit behind the Everflow application, so treat them as unverified until you're accepted and see the terms yourself. Cookie duration and minimum payout are gated the same way. And keep the name straight: buff.market is a separate NetEase skin marketplace on a different domain. Don't let one's affiliate details get quoted as the other's.
BUFF's public documentation and earning limits
BUFF publishes readable home, FAQ, and affiliate pages, plus an Overwolf authorization carrying a 'no malware / no mining' claim. Its player and daily-user counts are self-reported marketing rather than audited facts. The Trustpilot profile can add context, but its rating and review count change over time and do not verify earning rates or redemptions.
The documented limitations include the desktop-versus-mobile split, U.S.-only Marketplace items, low reported earnings, third-party tracking complaints, and affiliate payout rates that are unavailable before application. Public pages and third-party accounts do not establish payout speed or reward-stock reliability. Check the live catalog and applicable terms before relying on a particular reward.
This profile is built from public research dated 2026-07-16. SkinRake did not create an account, deposit, withdraw, pass KYC, or test an affiliate payment on BUFF Game. Account-only claims remain unconfirmed.
Not confirmed by public evidence: Public reputation check, Account-side verification, No live marketplace inventory was verified., Exact affiliate payout terms require program access..
Evidence summary
BUFF documents how its points and rewards work, but earning rates are modest and affiliate commissions remain hidden until application. Treat it as a background rewards app, not a dependable income source. Evidence status: Public evidence reviewed. Review the cited sources and unresolved limitations before deciding whether to use BUFF Game.