Microsoft Account Gaming Options - Family/Child Account?

mccmw

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Apr 10, 2026
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I set up a re-purposed laptop for my kids to use for school and games. I set up my sons' accounts as child accounts for content management. I have the Microsoft Family app installed and it is working. My oldest son loves Minecraft and he wanted to shift from exclusively playing on Nintendo Switch to using the laptop. I downloaded the Java and Bedrock Ultimate Collection and, after going through the expected parental approval and purchase process, was successful getting it installed on his Microsoft account. It loads properly and he can effectively use it in single player mode.

Question and help needed on future multiplayer and online access:

In the future, we will want to allow multiplayer...online or with his younger brother. The option is grayed out and when I hover the mouse on it it says it is linked to a Microsoft account setting. I have looked everywhere in Microsoft Family and his account and see nothing that allows me to enable/disable gaming options (multiplayer, online access, etc.). How/where are these settings? Much appreciated.
 

Hi mccmw — that gray Minecraft Multiplayer button is almost always controlled by the child’s Xbox privacy/online safety settings, not the regular Microsoft Family screen time/content page.
Minecraft uses Microsoft/Xbox family safety controls even on a Windows laptop, and Mojang specifically says multiplayer, Realms, friends, cross-network play, and chat are managed through the Xbox privacy/family settings.

Where to change it​

Use one of these:
Option A — Web browser
  1. Sign in as the parent/family organizer here: [Xbox Official Site: Consoles, Games and Community | Xbox](https://account.xbox.com/settings)
  2. Select your son’s child account/profile.
  3. Open Privacy & online safety.
  4. Check both the Privacy tab and the Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, and Windows 10 devices Online Safety tab.
  5. Set the needed items to Allow.
  6. Click Submit at the bottom of the page.
  7. Fully sign out of Minecraft/Minecraft Launcher, then restart it.
Option B — Xbox Family Settings app
  1. Install/open the Xbox Family Settings app, not just the Microsoft Family Safety app.
  2. Sign in with your parent Microsoft account.
  3. Tap your son’s profile.
  4. Open the settings/gear area.
  5. Look for multiplayer, friends, cross-network play, and communication settings.
  6. Allow the settings you want.
  7. Restart Minecraft afterward.

Settings to look for​

For Minecraft multiplayer, the important ones are usually:
1. You can join multiplayer games / Join multiplayer on Xbox
This enables Minecraft multiplayer, Realms, servers, and joining other players’ worlds.
2. You can play with people outside Xbox Live / Join cross-network play
This matters if he will play with people on Switch, PlayStation, mobile, or other non-Xbox/Microsoft platforms.
3. You can add friends / Add friends and follow others
Needed if he wants to add his brother/friends through the Minecraft/Xbox friend system.
4. Others can communicate with voice, text, or invites
Controls chat and invites. You can usually limit this to Friends instead of Everyone.
Minecraft’s own help page lists those same categories as the controls for child-account multiplayer access.

For playing with his younger brother​

A few things to keep in mind:
  1. Each child should use their own Microsoft/Xbox account.
  2. Each account may need its own Minecraft entitlement/license, depending on the edition and how it was purchased.
  3. For Bedrock Edition, they can play together via LAN/world invite if multiplayer is allowed.
  4. For Java Edition, local/LAN play is possible, but the child account still may need multiplayer permission enabled if the Multiplayer menu is blocked.
  5. The host world may also need its in-game Multiplayer toggle enabled.

After changing the settings​

  1. Close Minecraft.
  2. Close the Minecraft Launcher.
  3. Sign out/sign back into the launcher if needed.
  4. Restart the laptop if the button remains grayed out.
  5. Wait a few minutes, because Xbox privacy changes can sometimes take a little while to sync.

If it still stays grayed out​

Check these next:
  1. Confirm you changed settings for the same Microsoft account/gamertag used inside Minecraft.
  2. Try the Xbox settings page in a private/incognito browser window while signed in as the parent, not the child.
  3. Make sure his Microsoft account is actually listed as a child/member under your family group.
  4. Open the Xbox app on Windows once and sign in with his account to let the Xbox profile initialize.
  5. In Windows, check that the Microsoft Store, Xbox app, and Minecraft Launcher are all signed into the correct account.
Short version: go to account.xbox.com/settings as the parent, select the child, then allow Join multiplayer games and any friend/cross-network/chat settings you’re comfortable with.
 

Thanks...downloading and installing the Xbox Family Settings app seems to have worked.
 

Great — glad that did it, mccmw!
For future reference, the key distinction is:
Microsoft Family Safety app = screen time, app limits, content filters, purchase approvals
Xbox Family Settings app = gaming permissions like multiplayer, friends, cross-network play, chat, and online interaction
If multiplayer ever becomes grayed out again, try this quick refresh:
  1. Open the Xbox Family Settings app.
  2. Confirm your son’s profile still allows multiplayer.
  3. Close Minecraft and the Minecraft Launcher completely.
  4. Reopen the launcher and make sure it is signed into the correct child Microsoft account.
  5. Restart the laptop if the setting does not sync right away.
For sibling play later, you’ll probably also want to review:
1. Join multiplayer games — needed for multiplayer/Realms/servers.
2. Add friends — useful for inviting his brother.
3. Cross-network play — needed if playing with Switch/console/mobile players.
4. Communication settings — set to Friends if you want a safer middle ground.
Nice setup — child accounts can be a little confusing because the gaming controls are split away from the normal Family Safety app.
 

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