What Is Game Server Hosting? A Complete Beginner's Guide

Brandon M.

You’ve played on other people’s servers. Maybe you’ve even hosted a world locally for friends, dealing with the lag when your PC has to run both the game and the server. At some point, the thought crosses your mind: what if my server could just run all the time, without my computer being on?

That’s what game server hosting is for.

What Game Server Hosting Actually Does

When you play a multiplayer game, something has to keep track of the game state - where players are, what’s been built, who’s alive, what time it is in-game. That “something” is the server. It’s the authoritative source of truth that every player’s game client connects to.

Game server hosting means renting hardware in a data center to run that server software for you. Instead of your gaming PC doing double duty, a machine in a purpose-built facility handles the server while you just play. Your server stays online whether you’re at work, asleep, or playing something else entirely.

The hosting provider handles the infrastructure: power, cooling, network connectivity, hardware maintenance. You get a control panel to manage your server - start it, stop it, change settings, install mods - without needing to know how to SSH into a Linux box (though you can if you want to).

Why Not Just Self-Host?

Self-hosting seems appealing at first. You’ve already got a PC, maybe an old laptop sitting around. Why pay monthly for something you could run yourself?

Here’s what you’re actually signing up for with self-hosting:

Your home internet wasn’t designed for this. Residential connections typically have asymmetric bandwidth - decent download speeds, but upload speeds that choke when multiple players are syncing game data. Your ISP might throttle or block server traffic entirely. And everyone connecting to your server now has your home IP address.

Your hardware takes a beating. Running a game server 24/7 means your PC is running 24/7. That’s wear on components, electricity costs, and fan noise you’ll hear while trying to sleep.

You become the IT department. Server crashes at 3 AM? That’s your problem. Minecraft update breaks your mods? Better figure it out before your friends get online. DDoS attack because someone on your server upset the wrong person? Good luck with that on a residential router.

Self-hosting works fine for casual sessions with a few friends. But once you want something reliable - something that’s just there when people want to play - hosting makes sense.

Types of Game Server Hosting

Not all hosting is the same. Here’s how the options break down:

Shared Hosting (Game Servers) is what most people need. Your server runs on a machine alongside other customers’ servers, sharing the underlying hardware. This keeps costs low while still giving you access to powerful CPUs and fast storage. A good shared host allocates resources fairly and runs modern hardware so everyone gets solid performance. This is what WinterNode offers - all our Game Servers run on high-performance nodes with no artificial CPU or thread limits.

VPS (Virtual Private Server) hosting gives you a virtualized chunk of a physical server with guaranteed resources. You get more control and isolation, but you’re also responsible for more - operating system updates, security, installing the game server software yourself. VPS makes sense if you’re running something custom or need a specific environment, but it’s overkill for most game servers.

Dedicated Servers mean you rent an entire physical machine. This is the premium option: maximum performance, complete control, and a hefty price tag. Large communities running multiple game servers or needing bare-metal performance might go this route, but for a Minecraft server with 20 players, you’re paying for resources you’ll never use.

For the vast majority of people, shared game server hosting hits the sweet spot. You get the performance benefits of modern server hardware, the convenience of a managed control panel, and pricing that won’t break the bank.

The Specs That Actually Matter

When you’re comparing hosts, you’ll see a lot of numbers thrown around. Here’s what to pay attention to:

RAM is usually how game servers are priced and for good reason - it’s often the limiting factor. A vanilla Minecraft server might run fine on 2GB, but add mods and players and you’ll want at least 4-8GB. Games like ARK or Palworld are hungrier. Whatever game you’re running, check the recommended requirements and give yourself some headroom.

CPU single-thread performance matters more than core count for most game servers. Games like Minecraft are notoriously single-threaded - they can only use one CPU core effectively, so a faster individual core beats having more slower cores. This is why modern AMD Ryzen processors are popular for game hosting; their single-thread performance is excellent.

Storage type should be NVMe SSD at this point. If a host is still running spinning hard drives, that’s a red flag. The speed difference when loading chunks or saving world data is substantial.

Network and latency determine how responsive your server feels. Latency (ping) is the round-trip time between a player and the server. Lower is better - under 50ms feels responsive, over 100ms starts feeling sluggish. This is why server location matters. Pick a host with a data center near where most of your players are.

Common Mistakes Beginners Make

After years of helping people set up game servers, certain mistakes come up repeatedly:

Underestimating RAM requirements. That modpack says it needs 4GB minimum. You allocate exactly 4GB. Then you wonder why the server crashes with 10 players online. Minimum requirements typically assume ideal conditions, and low player counts. Give yourself a buffer.

Ignoring server location. You find a great deal on a host with servers in Europe. You and all your friends are in Texas. Everyone complains about lag. The cheapest option isn’t the best option if the server is on the wrong continent.

Choosing based on price alone. Some hosts charge $2/month for Minecraft hosting and then nickel-and-dime you for everything else - extra for backups, extra for DDoS protection, extra for support, extra for mod pack installations. Read what’s actually included.

Not understanding what they’re managing. Shared game hosting isn’t a “set it and forget it” service. You’re still responsible for configuring your server, managing plugins or mods, and handling your community. The host provides the infrastructure and support, but it’s your server.

Skipping backups. Some hosts include automatic backups. Some don’t. Either way, understand the backup situation before you’ve built something you don’t want to lose. World corruption happens. Accidents happen.

How to Choose a Host in 2025

The game hosting market has matured a lot. There are plenty of competent options, but there’s also plenty of outdated hosts running old hardware and confusing pricing schemes. Here’s what to look for:

Transparent pricing. You should be able to figure out what you’ll actually pay without a calculator and a law degree. If a host has multiple tiers, add-ons for basic features, or setup fees, that complexity usually isn’t in your favor.

Modern hardware. Ask what CPUs they’re running. Hosts proud of their hardware will tell you. Hosts running five-year-old Xeons probably won’t advertise it.

Reasonable resource policies. Some hosts oversell aggressively-cramming too many servers onto each machine until everyone’s performance suffers. Others throttle CPU or limit threads to squeeze more customers per node. Look for hosts that let you actually use the resources you’re paying for.

Support that’s actually helpful. This is hard to evaluate upfront, but it matters when something goes wrong. Check reviews, ask in community Discord servers, see if the host has a presence where they’re actually engaging with customers.

A location near your players. Most hosts offer multiple locations. Pick the one closest to the majority of your players. This single choice affects everyone’s experience more than almost any other factor.

Getting Started

If you’re ready to try game server hosting, the barrier to entry is low. Most hosts offer monthly billing with no long-term commitment, so you can test things out without being locked in.

We’re obviously biased, but WinterNode exists because we wanted hosting that didn’t nickel-and-dime people. All our Game Servers are priced at $1.99/GB of RAM - we don’t charge extra for CPU usage, storage space, or basic features that other hosts mark up. We’ve got eight locations across North America, Europe, and Australia, all running modern AMD Ryzen hardware with NVMe storage.

If you want to test the waters, we offer a 48-hour free trial on Minecraft servers. Just spin one up and see how it feels. For other games, everything’s backed by our 48-hour refund policy, so there’s no risk in trying things out.

Got questions before you start? Our support team responds to tickets with actual humans, and we’re active on Discord if you prefer chatting there. We’ve been doing this since 2017 and have grown from a single Minecraft node to over 60 game nodes entirely through word of mouth - we’d love to have you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Game server hosting is a service that provides dedicated hardware to run multiplayer game servers 24/7, giving you control over settings, mods, and who can join without tying up your home PC or internet connection.

If you want a server that stays online 24/7, supports more players, or runs mods reliably, yes. Hosting on your own PC limits performance, uptime, and can expose your home IP address.

Prices typically range from $5-30/month depending on the game, player count, and resources needed. At WinterNode, all games are $1.99/GB of RAM with no extra charges for CPU or storage.

Shared hosting runs your server alongside others on the same machine, keeping costs low while still providing excellent performance. Dedicated hosting gives you an entire physical server, which is overkill for most game servers but useful for very large communities.