Best 1xBet Partner Program Review [2025 Update] | 40% Rev Share

By Dylan Wiley

Best 1xBet Partner Program Review [2025 Update] | 40% Rev Share

Quick Disclosure: We're about to tell you how the 1xBet Partner Program is a great partner program for sportsbook offers. And we really mean it. Just know that if you click on a 1xBet Partner Program link, we may earn a small commission. Your choice.

X. It's a great letter associated with many great things.

Like... an entire generation.

It's also the best part of mobile ads. (The part that closes them)

And there's even some guy you might have heard of that branded his companies with it.

If there's one affiliate program that deserves to bear the mighty X, then it's our top affiliate program of the week.

So, the 1xBet Partner Program -- what's it all about besides making you a bunch of money? (We'll get to that soon.)

The answer is simple. The 1xBet Partner Program is all about promoting the world's best sportsbook. Plain and simple.

Don't know what the world's best sportsbook is?

Here's a hint. Look at the name of this affiliate program -- the 1xBet Partner Program -- and hone in on the bit with the x in it.

Yep, the 1xBet Partner Program is all about promoting the sportsbook bearing the same name.

Well, there's also a casino side to the business you can promote with the 1xBet Partner Program if that's more your thing.

But, let's be honest. If the 1xBet Partner Program has built a reputation for one thing, it ain't the casino. It's 100% for the killer sportsbook bearing its name.

So already, you've got one great reason as to why you should be promoting with the 1xBet Partner Program.

Now let's get to the second good reason you should be promoting with the 1xBet Partner Program -- the commissions.

Alright, let's talk about the 1xBet Partner Program commissions.

First up, as with any good sportsbook program, we've got the 1xBet Partner Program rev share plan -- the default plan you'll be on as a new 1xBet Partner Program affiliate.

As a new affiliate, the 1xBet Partner Program starts you out at 25%, which is already huge.

But, from there, the sky's basically the limit. And, by the sky, I mean hitting 40% rev share with the 1xBet Partner Program isn't unheard of, assuming you can deliver results.

But, as the greatest telemarketer of all time famously said, "But that's not all."

The 1xBet Partner Program also offers a couple more deals -- a CPA and a hybrid CPA/rev share deal. Although, you'll have to negotiate these directly with your 1xBet Partner Program affiliate manager to find out what these are paying.

Alright, this bit's easy. Here's what you should do next.

If you still reckon you need more info on the 1xBet Partner Program, then head on over to TopRanked.io for our full 1xBet Partner Program review.

Or, if you're one of the wiser ones and you already know what's best for you, then head directly to the 1xBet Partner Program to sign up now.

It's been a while since we've written anything about Reddit.

In fact, I'm pretty sure the last time we spoke about it was almost five months ago, in our uMobix Affiliate Program review edition.

But then something crossed my radar that I thought you guys just had to see.

Reddit just recorded a 35% year-on-year increase in engagement in over 1,000 sports-themed Subreddits.

Now, if you're a growth-stage social network, maybe that 35% increase isn't that much.

I mean, take a look at this uptick in Bluesky we reported on back in our Bonafides affiliate program review edition.

Now, I have no idea what percentage that big blue uptick actually works out to. But I can tell you that it's a hell of a lot more than 35%. And it sure as hell didn't take a full year to materialize.

But what if you're an already established platform like Reddit? A platform with an existing user base of hundreds of millions of weekly active users. Then that same 35% is actually really freakin' huge.

And it's even more huge when they tell you exactly where all of this engagement goodness was taking place. Well, they sort of told us... they weren't so specific that we know exactly which subredits got all this attention. We just know that they were sports-themed.

But hey, that's good enough, isn't it?

For the longest time, Reddit's been both a horrible and a great place to go do some marketing.

It's horrible because their user base is hyper cynical and will actively call out and downvote basically anything they don't like. Including blatant ads.

But, if you can get the tone and the message right, it pretty much gives you unlimited access to some of the more engaged internet communities out there.

Plus, let's not forget the SEO side play that naturally goes along with it.

Anyway, bla bla bla. Reddits (potentially) great for marketing.

And Reddit just told you it had a massive uptick in engagement across sports-themed subreddits.

And if you're not putting one and one together yet, then let me do it for you.

Go get yourself a 1xBet Partner Program account and start spamming Reddit like your life depended on it.

If you read our Bovada Affiliate Program Review edition a couple of months ago, then you've already seen one version of the story that comes next.

As a refresher, the basic gist of that went like this:

Now, admittedly, the takeaway from that story was moderately distasteful. We basically said you should go jump into the comments with the abusers. That way, you can lead confirmed sports bettors to the top of your sports betting-related funnel.

But, as distasteful as that might seem, it just has too many pros outweighing the one con:

Exactly.

Talk about something with the potential to work big time.

Especially if you partner up with someone like the 1xBet Partner Program. I mean, talk about a killer combo. [PS: There are links all over this page that'll take you to the 1xBet Partner Program if you wanna stop here and start marketing now.]

And with that background out of the way, let me give you a rough outline of something I saw this week:

Now, if you read closely, you'll see that this latest story is exactly the same as the first one.

Well, almost the same.

The big difference this time is we're talking about actual pro-level sports and not just the NCAA. That and the fact that the NCAA report was across all sports, while this latest one is just tennis.

Now, as for specifics in the findings, here's the key figure you should pay attention to:

Look, this one should be pretty clear.

Go jump into the comments on social media and @ people abusing athletes.

Chances are, they're active sports bettors.

Go harness that rage and turn it against their current sportsbook. Then lead them to whatever you're promoting. [PS: If you have no ideas about where to lead them, then might I suggest the 1xBet Partner program?]

Now, I totally understand that this doesn't scale. I mean, who wants to manually lookup posts on social media. And who wants to manually read posts on social media? And who wants to manually copy-paste replies on social media?

But, for all of its unscalability, that's part of what makes this such a tempting niche to get into. Literally nobody else is bothering, meaning it's literally yours for the taking.

And yes, once you've tested it out, there is a path to automation. I'm sure you can figure it out. But, if you can't, go see our Bovada Affiliate Program Review edition where we covered the NCAA angle. There's a full automation strategy outlined there.

But, with that said, automating this is probably getting ahead of ourselves. For now, go test it manually with a really strong affiliate offer from a really strong affiliate program.

The 1xBet Partner Program has got you sorted there.

This week, I came across this article about so-called "mall stocks".

You know, like publically traded stocks for companies that are in some way associated with malls.

Now, as for the particular angle, that's pretty much in the full title of the article: "Mall stocks are ripping right now. Here's how nostalgia fuels our trading decisions."

And yeah, I know you're probably wondering what on earth that's got to do with affiliate marketing.

Let me explain, starting with a study the article's author outlines.

That study was all about which decade was the "best" for a bunch of stuff. You know, like the economy, TV, music, etc.

Basically, that study asked people questions like "Which decade had the best economy?", "Which decade had the best music?", "In which decade were communities the closest?", etc. etc.

And, apparently, the findings were pretty random at first.

Pretty much every decade was "equal" in terms of being "the best".

But, then the study's authors did something interesting.

They split the participants into age-based cohorts. Then this emerged:

Now, already that's pretty interesting in and of itself.

But then the author of the Mall Stonks article did something even more interesting.

They started looking at how nostalgia is driving a bunch of real-life buying decisions. Starting with the Warner Brothers stores of the 90s.

Basically, in the 90s, these Warner Bros stores were huge with... adults.

And you see the same thing with all sorts of nostalgia stuff over time, like the fully-grown adult men and women buying all sorts of "nostalgia" items to decorate their homes... and themselves with.

But the author didn't stop at this surface level nostalgia.

In this part, the author points out a bunch of stuff.

For example, how a certain demographic puts too much weight into the importance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. An index he calls "a clunky basket of a paltry 30 assets."

His answer, of course, is nostalgia.

And that's how we eventually get back to the topic of malls.

Here's (some) of what he has to say:

"In this way, the megamall -- the apex ecosystem of American consumerism in the 1990s and 2000s -- is merely this next generation of traders' nostalgia play. The institution that defined what was a successful retail company is still, in the bones of the generation of retail traders in their 20s and 30s, defining the companies that have an emotional stake in our financial acumen. It's probably not a coincidence that some of the stocks that went supernova during the meme stock frenzy -- GameStop and AMC among them -- are mall stocks, the companies where the generation that has the money today cashed in their allowance and babysitting money in 2004."

And that right there is a pretty surface level look of what the article was about.

So, where's the affiliate marketing coming into this?

Alright, let's get to the takeaway.

Unlike the last story where I gave you a very specific play, this takeaway's gonna be a bit more vague.

Basically, the whole point of this story was to point out something really powerful.

If the author's theory is right -- that nostalgia is driving a bunch of real-world purchasing decisions -- then that should be something you should try tapping into.

I mean, what could be more powerful than tapping into someone's warm and fuzzies?

And that's basically the play. Tie something nostalgic into your campaigns and see what happens.

Now, I know I said I wasn't going to give you anything concrete.

But, I kinda feel like this is still kinda vague.

And I don't really want to write the 1000 words I need to really get into this with much more specificity.

So, instead, I'm just gonna show you something that should hopefully get your creative juices flowing.

As for the sportsbook at the bottom of that... you can promote that one too with the 1xBet Partner Program.

On that note (nostalgia, in case you skipped news section), I thought maybe it was appropriate to bring up one of the greatest marketing campaigns of the decade.

And no, I'm not talking about the fat commie in the picture.

Plus, it tapped right into the very beating heart of America's nostalgic past. Which, if you read the last news item, you'd know is an incredibly powerful tool for selling stuff.

But here's where it gets even better.

For starters, all the nostalgia we talked about before was highly specific. The DJI index, Warner Bros, malls, etc... it's all tied to a specific era. A specific generation.

But "Make America Great Again"?

That's so open ended that the whole family can jive with it.

But that's not all.

There's one other point where this lack of specificity looks like the absolute master stroke of a genius.

By being extremely vague, the slogan is literally inviting you to "imagine". To fill in the blanks with your own mind.

Basically, "Make America Great Again" is a marketing genius's version of the sort of slop we see all over the place.

"Imagine a future where you didn't have to wipe your own ass."

But we see it in copy all over the place. Marketers inviting us to "imagine" this, or "picture" that.

Make America Greate Again does exactly that. But way, way better.

And here's the best bit.

By leaving people's own minds to fill in the blanks, all their "imagining" and "picturing" will be 100x more powerful than if someone had spelt out exactly what they should be imagining.

It's kinda like the same effect when people are afraid of the dark.

There's a noise. Or a weird figure.

Immediately, the brain seeks to fill in the gap. And usually, it fills in the gap with something 1000x worse than reality.

This is what MAGA does. But in reverse. That is, in a positive way.

But, just in case you're thinking it's impossible to tap into nostalgia whilst simultaneously being vague but also driving people to imagine something really powerful and specific without actually telling them what to imagine or even to imagine in the first place... well... here's something I threw together in 5 seconds to prove that it's possible.

Now, I admit that it's a bit crude and hacky.

But if you spent more than 5 seconds on it, I'm sure you could come up with something a million times better.

Oh... and one other thing.

That logo on the bottom.... you can promote with that one too if you join the 1xBet Partner program today.

DISCLAIMER: This article was written by a third party contributor and does not reflect the opinion of Born2Invest, its management, staff or its associates. Please review our disclaimer for more information.

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