Community storage
FTP-accessed
Multi-user permissions
your community's files

One place for everything you save.

A shared drive for your gaming community — content creation media, archived world saves, onboarding docs, whatever your team needs to keep around. Hosted by us, accessed over FTP, managed in your dashboard.

HDD or SSD classes Multi-user FTP Scheduled backups
what it is

A Google Drive / Dropbox alternative for gaming communities.

Most of our customers were already doing this the hard way — creating /Videos, /Streams, /Documents folders inside their game server's own file system, sharing FTP credentials around, and hoping nothing important got overwritten. Storage Accounts give you a purpose-built storage product for all the stuff that isn't a game-server file: content creation media, onboarding docs, manually archived world saves. Separate from your servers, accessed by its own users.

FTP access

Connect with any standard FTP client — FileZilla, WinSCP, Cyberduck. Credentials are created and managed in your dashboard.

Multiple user accounts

Create a separate FTP user per team member — each with its own username, password, and permission set. Self-serve from the dashboard.

Granular permissions

Eight permission flags per user: read / write / delete / append for files, create / delete / list / subdirectories for folders. Lock down who can do what, per account.

Scheduled backups

Automatic, on a schedule. Your files are protected against accidental deletion or corruption without you having to remember anything.

STD or PREM — your call

Standard tier rides our HDD pool for archival and media. Premium rides the same SSD arrays our Premium game-server tiers use — pick Premium when your working set is active-edit and you want the IOPS.

Both US regions

Deployable in US - TN - 01 and US - WA - 01 — same region menu as the rest of our hosting.

important to know

Storage Accounts don't attach to your game servers.

Storage Accounts are a separate, standalone product. They don't mount to your game server or dedicated server as a drive, and they don't automatically collect your game server's own backups. Everything happens over FTP — your community uploads files in, your community downloads files out.

If you want to archive an old world save here, upload it yourself from your computer or from your game server's FTP. Our scheduled game server backups stay on the game server infrastructure — they don't write into your Storage Account.

Great for
content team media, community docs, manually-archived old world saves, mod-pack libraries, anything non-game-server.
Not for
live game-server file sync, server-side mount, or as a destination for our automated game-server backups.
what it's for

Patterns we see most.

Four recurring shapes. If one of them sounds like your community, a Storage Account probably saves you from a messier workaround.

Content creator media

A central library for recorded gameplay, screenshots, thumbnail assets, project files. Your content team uploads, your editors download — instead of dragging 8 GB files through Discord.

Archived world saves

Old Minecraft worlds, Valheim maps, ArmA missions you've moved on from but can't bring yourself to delete. Upload the folder from your game server's FTP once and let them live here.

Onboarding & collaboration docs

SOPs, rules, event plans, training materials — the community-reference stuff that doesn't fit in Discord and doesn't need the overhead of a Google Docs tenant.

Configuration backups

Copies of server configs, mod-pack bundles, setup docs. When you rebuild or migrate a server, your source of truth is one FTP connection away.

fine-grained access

Every user gets exactly what they need.

Each FTP account has its own permission set — eight flags total, four for files and four for directories. Give your content team write access to /footage while keeping /server-configs read-only for everyone else.

File permissions

What they can do with files

  • Read — download and view files
  • Write — upload new files
  • Delete — remove existing files
  • Append — add to existing files
Directory permissions

What they can do with folders

  • Create — make new folders
  • Delete — remove folders
  • List — browse directory contents
  • Subdirectories — cascade rules through nested folders
questions

Before you set one up.

How do I access my storage?
Over FTP from any standard client — FileZilla, WinSCP, Cyberduck. Credentials are created and managed in your hosting dashboard once we provision the volume.
Can it mount directly to my game server or dedicated server?
No. Storage Accounts are a separate, standalone product — they don't mount as a drive on your servers and don't automatically capture anything from them. Files get in and out of a Storage Account over FTP only. If you want to archive an old world save here, you upload it yourself from the game server's FTP.
Do your automated game-server backups go into my Storage Account?
No — game-server backups live on the game-server infrastructure and have their own restore flow. A Storage Account is for files you manually put there. Archived old worlds, media, configuration copies, docs — whatever your community wants to keep.
How many FTP accounts can I create?
Multiple — each with its own username, password, and permission set. That's how you separate content-team write access from member read-only access without sharing a single credential. Management is self-serve from the dashboard.
Are my files backed up?
Yes. Scheduled backups run automatically, in-region. You don't have to configure anything or remember to press a button.
Can I resize the volume later?
Not self-serve today. Contact support — we'll provision a new volume at your new size and migrate your files over during a scheduled window.
Are there file-type restrictions?
No. Store any file type — world saves, video files, images, documents, archives, mod packs — whatever your community needs.
How do I order one?
Start an order, pick your region, class (HDD or SSD), capacity, and add-on plans, and complete the PayPal subscription. Your volume provisions automatically — first FTP credential lands in your dashboard in under a minute.

Ready for a real place to put all of it?

Head to the dashboard, pick a class and capacity, and your volume provisions on the spot. No back-and-forth.