PCWorld (USA)

How to use Microsoft Rewards to get Xbox Game Pass for PC (and more!) for free

Microsoft Rewards is an easy way to pick up the equivalent of a little free cash on the side without any extra effort.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

Microsoft Rewards is basically free money, and not enough of you know how to use it. We’re going to show you how to use Microsoft Rewards to help buy all the things you want—an Xbox Series X! Starbucks! Amazon gift cards!—beginning with the awesome Game Pass for PC subscripti­on.

Like the name says, Microsoft Rewards is

Microsoft’s incentive program for using its consumer services. Using Bing earns you points. Playing Xbox games can earn you points. Playing PC games can earn you points. You can “chase points” as much as you’d like, and earn more and more. Or you can chill, go about your daily activities as you normally would, and still earn points. All of these points can be traded in for stuff you’ll actually want.

We’ll use the awesome Xbox Game Pass for PC ( go.pcworld.com/ xbps), which costs $4.99 per month, as our target. Game Pass for PC is part of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate’s “Netflixfor-games” subscripti­on, which we’ve already shown can be purchased for peanuts ( go.pcworld.com/pnut) if you know the trick. But why pay at all? Microsoft Rewards is the answer to that.

WHAT CAN YOU EARN WITH MICROSOFT REWARDS?

As we go through our tutorial, keep your eye on the prize: a one-month Game Pass for PC subscripti­on is 7,000 points. You can pay 5,000 points for a $5 Microsoft gift card, though that can only be applied to games, apps, movies/tv shows, or devices like a Surface or Xbox—not Game Pass.

But the Microsoft Rewards redemption page ( go.pcworld.com/rdpg) offers all sorts of possibilit­ies: Microsoft gift cards and Game Pass subscripti­ons, including Game Pass Ultimate; gift cards to retailers like Amazon, Target, REI, Sephora, and Walmart; food offers at Starbucks, Burger King, Dominos,

Ubereats, Doordash and Grubhub. You can even donate your points (and their cash value) to the World Wildlife Foundation, Girls Who Code, the American Red Cross, The Trevor Project, and more. Microsoft will often “pay” you points to double your donation.

Here’s a small, representa­tive sample: $5 Amazon gift card: 5,250 points

$10 Microsoft gift card: 10,000 points Xbox Game Pass Ultimate (1 mo):

12,000 points

$15 Doordash gift card: 19,500 points You can even gamble points, with games such as Select Three or Whack-a-piñata offering the chance at $250,000, 500 Xbox One S consoles or other prizes for 300 points a pop.

Microsoft has an odd tiering system, which offers discounts after progressin­g from Level 1 (at 500 points or less) to Level 2. That

• • •

means you’ll spend even less to “buy” what you want with Rewards points as you earn more throughout the month.

USING MICROSOFT REWARDS FOR PC (AND MOBILE)

There’s one prerequisi­te: Microsoft Rewards requires a Microsoft account. You’ll probably have to sign in to your account when you visit the Microsoft Rewards introducto­ry page ( go. pcworld.com/rdpg). Quickly click through to the Microsoft Rewards Dashboard page ( go. pcworld.com/rdpg; the image at the top of this story) to open the door to your free stuff. If you’re signed up and logged in, Microsoft Rewards points will automatica­lly accumulate— there’s nothing more you need to do.

There are two big ways to earn Microsoft Rewards on the PC: searching via Bing, and doing fun quizzes. Each day, Microsoft will “pay” you up to 150 points for searching with Bing on your PC, up to 5 points per search. If you search with Bing on your smartphone, you can receive 100 points more (5 points per search). Using the solid Microsoft Edge

browser ( go.pcworld.com/msbr) nets you a bonus of up to 20 points, too.

(“But that means I have to use Bing,” some of you may whine. I’m a habitual Bing user; I switched to Bing in 2017 ( go.pcworld.com/ bn17), back to Chrome when Bing fell down ( go. pcworld.com/fldn), hard; and back to Bing over the past year or so after Microsoft fixed Bing’s issues. You could still use Google in a pinch.)

In effect, doing nothing more than using Edge and Bing to search on your PC (30 days x 150 points, plus 30 days x 20 points = 5,100 points) will earn you the equivalent of $5 per month without any extra effort on your part.

If you’d like, you can also gamify the process. Every day Microsoft offers you three choices: a “daily set” of a quiz, a poll, and a fact. Clicking each of them will generally earn you an additional 50 points a day. Microsoft will also add bonus points for three successive days that you perform daily sets, such as 45 points per three-day streak. If you miss a day, your daily-set streak resets. But don’t feel too bad, as some of the quizzes will automatica­lly archive down lower in the dashboard.

If you keep up with your “daily sets,” the 1,500 points you’ll receive plus the 5,100 points from searching gets you close to our target of 7,000 points. Add that to the bonuses should put you at, or very near, that 7,000 figure. Victory! But why stop there?

If there’s one area Microsoft Rewards has neglected, it’s earning points for playing PC games—something we’ll talk about in the next section. But you can also earn Rewards points for buying them, using actual cash. In August 2020, for example, Microsoft was offering 5,000 points alone for spending $50 on game purchases. And if you rent or bought any three movies in August, you could earn another 2,500. It’s something to keep in mind if you’re considerin­g renting a movie online.

USING MICROSOFT REWARDS ON XBOX

Accumulati­ng Microsoft Rewards points on the Xbox is all about playing games. Initially, Microsoft Rewards was primarily a Pc-only undertakin­g. Now, there are arguably more ways to accumulate Rewards points on Microsoft’s console than anywhere else.

While there’s no Microsoft Rewards app for the PC or Android, there is one for the Xbox. Go to the Microsoft Store app to download it. Once there, you’ll need to make sure you’re logged in after you open it up.

Not surprising­ly, Microsoft makes playing games itself a game. Every week, you’ll have the opportunit­y to do the Rewards Weekly Set, with three tasks: you might simply have to log in on three successive days, or watch a trailer for an upcoming game, or accumulate three Xbox Achievemen­ts in any game. Keep doing this, and you’ll earn points, plus big 1,000-point and even 2,500-point bonuses once you hit milestones like the ten-week mark. Note that you can still earn Achievemen­ts from playing PC games, but they have to be downloaded via the Windows 10 Xbox app, and the developer has to have Achievemen­ts enabled.

But wait, there’s more!

Way down at the bottom of the Microsoft Rewards app, there’s something called Other Ways To Earn. While that section serves as a summary of your PC searches on your PC and mobile, it also leads to another section called

Game Pass Quests, where even more Rewards points lurk.

In general, Game Pass Quests are chump change. You’ll receive a handful of points for playing a game in Game Pass (for PC or Xbox) and earning achievemen­ts in Game Pass games. Quests can be achieved daily (like logging in to the Game Pass app for Android) or weekly, and constantly change. They can be as simple as 50 points just for logging in to an app, or require more complex accomplish­ments like surviving for 50 days in Cities: Skylines. However, there’s generally a fairly large reward (1,000 points) for completing a succession of weekly and daily quests.

There’s one catch: Unlike every other Rewards task, you must redeem Game Pass Quests manually. Other Microsoft Rewards points that you earn are automatica­lly added to your total. You don’t need to log on to your Xbox to do this,

however, as the Xbox Game Pass app for Android allows you to redeem Quest points, too.

OTHER WAYS TO WIN REWARDS POINTS

Until recently,

Microsoft would send you a weekly email with the opportunit­y to win Rewards points by clicking through links, as well as the occasional “hidden link” which awarded even more. That seems to have gone away in favor of the expanded Xbox opportunit­ies.

There are occasional crumbs hidden away, too. Microsoft Rewards extension for Chrome promises some additional points, and the Bing app for Android used to (that implementa­tion has been broken on my phone for months).

HOW MANY POINTS CAN YOU EARN FROM MICROSOFT REWARDS PER MONTH?

Microsoft Rewards is always in flux, so the value of individual tasks and the total amount of Rewards points available is constantly changing. Sharp-eyed Rewards hawks keep an eye out for discounts on gift cards, stretching your Rewards even further. Special promotions constantly pop up.

With that said, one member of Reddit calculated ( go. pcworld.com/ rclc) that you can earn up to 18,000 points per month, or about $ 22.50. At that point, the amount of effort required to chase every Rewards point wouldn’t seem to be worth your time.

Smart Rewards users, then, balance their time against their potential rewards. Sure, you can probably afford an extra $5 per month for Microsoft’s Game Pass for PC. But there’s something oddly rewarding about just “getting it for free”—and Microsoft Rewards scratches that itch.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Xbox Game Pass Ultimate bundles Microsoft’s Netflix-esque Xbox Game Pass and Xbox Game Pass for PC subscripti­ons with its Xbox Live Gold service.
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate bundles Microsoft’s Netflix-esque Xbox Game Pass and Xbox Game Pass for PC subscripti­ons with its Xbox Live Gold service.
 ??  ?? Just some of the things you can redeem for Microsoft Rewards points.
Just some of the things you can redeem for Microsoft Rewards points.
 ??  ?? ...and by completing quizzes.
...and by completing quizzes.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Microsoft constantly adds fun little tasks for you to do to earn Rewards points.
Microsoft constantly adds fun little tasks for you to do to earn Rewards points.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Don’t forget to turn in your Quests for extra points.
Don’t forget to turn in your Quests for extra points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia