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The Macho Man

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  1. Things like this are why I don't think online slots are truly random. I think the game providers break everything down via sessions and track your winnings. When you 'log in' to a game I think it pulls up info on your past winnings with that provider and decides if it wants to give you a winning session or not and bases everything around that. Because I've had big wins on games and then no matter what other games I play they will all be dog water and not payout anything until any previous winnings get 'paid back'. I'm on this kind of streak right now with playngo. Last month I did very well on them, this month, every bonus has paid under 20x and that's if I can even land a bonus within 500 spins.
  2. And I was literally right about my 1 million a month prediction. Trainwrecks went on a podcast with H3H3 a couple days ago and said stake is paying him 1 million a month to stream and people believed it was impossible these streamers can get paid that much LOL. Like I said... a lot of you really know nothing about the industry.
  3. Well the big loophole here is all of this is done with cryptocurrencies. So as far as I know its all a grey area which is why they get away with it. I don't think anything will happen with them until the US accepts that crypto is a currency. And the license givers are happy to hand out licenses to these sites until those loopholes are dealt with. Which is why I said its like the wild west. Crypto was a god send for some of these companies because it let them step over the line and take advantage of big markets like the US. That's why stake grew so fast. My guess is when pressure starts showing up, Eddie the owner will just outright ban people from US and it will be like a traditional online casino with KYC and 'play at your own risk'. So I'm guessing for Eddie it's just a race to buy his way to the top and when that pressure comes he can afford to let go of the US market.
  4. Also just another quick thing that can help shed light on just how much money stake is bringing in... I've attached an image that shows the recent weekly affiliate earnings for the past 7 days that they send out every week on the affiliate telegram group... $1.85 million PROFIT. paid out to affiliates the past week. Now most affiliates on stake only get 10% of profit as their base payout. Some do get more, but those are mostly streamers and I don't think streamer affiliate income is accounted for in these stats (stake doesn't allow streamers to participate in other parts of community rewards and they usually have their own affiliate section), but lets just stick with the base 10% paid out to affiliates. Which means based on these numbers, stake made $18.5 million dollars this past week in profit... NOW that's just profit that is traceable to affiliates who referred people in, this doesn't even account for just regular signups that had no affiliate referrals tied to the account. So just off these numbers alone, stake is making 50-75 million a month just on accounts tied to affiliate referrals. Now add in accounts with no referrals and streamers who's referrals may or may not be contributing to this number and stake is easily pulling in 50-75+ million a month profit, who knows what the total profit is after all expenses are paid for like paying out streamers/ambassadors/etc. The point is they are making a CRAP TON of money. And yet there are people here who still think they can't afford to pay streamers 100k a month LOL.
  5. I don't know much other than whats already out there. I know someone who knows the owner, the guy started the site maybe two/three years ago or so maybe. At first it was nothing more than a typical crypto casino site offering stuff like dice, and other basic games. Then I believe it acquired some shady curacao license or 'piggy-backed' off one (don't know the correct term here). But it's been talked about on other platforms and articles that stake does use one of those shady licenses. Point is it was created by some guy a couple years ago as another generic crypto casino that was built up overtime to be more 'legit' and secured the ability to host real slots / table games. Then the big crypto boom happened, obviously more people got into crypto, the guy did very well for himself, started paying influencers to play on his site and it snowballed recently in the past half year I'd say. Now he has money to buy 'brand ambassadors' like UFC fighters and even bought an ad spot on the UFC mat for past PPV events. But the overall point is this guy wasn't apart of any big casino company or I don't think he was funded in anyway, I think he may of got rich early off crypto and opened his own site and it blew up from there. But yeah crypto casinos work in a grey area in a lot of places. I don't think they have to deal with the same kind of regulations since most governments don't consider it a currency (At least thats their reasoning why they let people from US play). Although I think they are starting to crack down on this as some of the big US streamers are starting to move out of the states or gamble only when they visit places like mexico. (Big crackdown might be coming). And rumor has it the site itself is starting to crack down on US players, but I don't think they are, they are just trying to appear like they are cracking down. But yeah I can see why the Euro people on this site think all of this sounds ridiculous and can't be possible because they see regulations everywhere for online casinos in their country. But crypto casinos are the wild west of online gambling, there are almost no regulations for it, and crypto in general is very anonymous to begin with so crypto casinos can get away with a lot more currently. That's why there's so much money in it and its growing so fast.
  6. And to further drive home the point lets talk about the affiliate marketing side of things. There are casino affiliate programs out there that offer anywhere from $200-$300 + % of lifetime recurring income (based off play) to affiliate who promote casinos and get people to signup under their affiliate links and play. Each casino calculates their average LVC (lifetime value of customer) in order to determine how much they are willing to pay an affiliate to generate signups to their website. If a casino is willing to pay 200-300$ for signups PLUS a % of the money made for a lifetime off a customer.... chances are the average value of each casino customer is worth easily over $500-1000 for offering deals like that. Now take a guy like XQC... gets 150-200k views per stream. All his content on all platforms probably gets seen by a minimum of maybe 10 million unique people per month. (I'm pretty sure its a lot more than that, but for argument sake lets stick with 10 million unique viewers). Lets play it safe and assume that out of those 10 million unique viewers watching his gambling content, he gets a minimum of 1% of those people to signup and gamble. Maybe since his viewers are a lot younger that the value of his LVC signups are on the low end of $500. That's still $50,000,000 in expected lifetime value of his signups. AND THAT'S LOW BALLING for almost all numbers used in this discussion. So you're telling me a casino would never pay 1 million dollars a month for $50,000,000 in return? Yea... you guys have no idea how much money is in gambling.
  7. They do pay millions to streamers, you know why? its the best marketing possible. they show live gameplay of the casino, they interact with their community and not everyone is a broke kid. all they need is a couple whales to make their money back. but they will still make their money back on people thet get addicted to gambling anyway. You guys have no idea how the business works. Gambling advertising is already super strict as is and casinos look for any loopholes to try and get advertisements out there and this is the best way to do it. Stake was a no name crypto casino a year ago. now everyone knows about it... Also you really think some streamer is going to 'sell out' and risk being called a scumbag for peddling gambling to their community for a couple thousand dollars in sponsorship money at their level? You guys have no idea how much money is involved in sponsorships and affiliate earnings (you think guys like roshtein would refuse to take subs and donations if they weren't making an insane amount of money from casino sponsorships already? Rosh could easily have 10-20k subs and probably make thousands a day off donations alone yet he doesn't even care to do so.) Every time these discussions are brought up the main issue I notice is people's lack of understand of just how much money these casinos have and are willing to spend on advertising, branding, and other ways to generate interest in their casinos. ITS BIG MONEY. these websites can't just go advertise on google/facebook/instagram with traditional marketing because it's all banned. So their marketing budget is literally spent on influencers and it works.
  8. https://www.dexerto.com/entertainment/adin-ross-leaks-massive-sponsorship-figures-for-gambling-twitch-streams-1592361/ there's just one example and the guy isn't even as massive as these other streamers you're talking about. more than likely guys like train and xqc get multiple millions per month.
  9. This is a HUGE factor in why i play crypto casinos. its annoymous and instant deposits and withdrawals. No dicking around with verifications and some people here basically having to send in bank statements and prove they can afford to gamble etc its ridiculous. I understand why they have to do it in some countries but most casinos abuse that system in their favor to stall people from getting paid out. I'm honestly surprised crypto casinos aren't over taking the main online casinos right now.
  10. you guys have to keep in mind that these casinos PAY A SHIT TON OF MONEY for sponsorships. Mizkif a 20k viewer streamer said he was sponsored for 1 hour streams and was making $35,000 AN HOUR. And he said he thinks he was low balled too. There are streamers out there that are easily making 100k+ a month minimum just from sponsorship money, some of the top guys easily clear 1 million a month off these crypto casinos in sponsorship money and that doesn't even include the affiliate money they get. Do I think it's ok? no... but nobody here seems to understand just how much money sponsored streamers get from these casinos. That's why 90% of the time its real money you are seeing being spent... These streamers are making a lot of money and can afford to up their bets (also when guys like train and xqc showed up they muddied the waters by doing 500-1000 bets per spin, now everyone feels like they have to do the same just to get those views).
  11. typical hacksaw game. I love cubes 2 and chaos crew has been pretty well for me, but yea... the amount of dead bonuses in those games is insane. There's basically only 3 outcomes. 5x, 100x or 1000x+... 99% of the time its 5x
  12. congrats!!! I know this game has potential, just never thought I'd see anyone hit that potential HAHA
  13. Nice win... Hate these gems games by playngo though. Super volatile and are boring as all hell.
  14. I mean its the same as any book game, I just dont think you're going to see many max wins on this game vs one with a higher RTP. There has to be a catch to this game. Like no provider wants to release real 99% RTP slots. that's like investing money into something and getting a 1% return when you could just invest your money into something else at 4% return. The game isnt fun or interesting enough to get enough people to play it to make up for that 3% loss either... So whats the catch? I'm guessing it just means the game is a grinder game where you sit there and collect books, get a bonus make some money rinse repeat no real profit potential unless you hit some lucky 1 out of 1 million bonus where you might get a max win. Vs playing something like book of dead which might have a better chance at max win at like 1 out of 100,000 but you have the possibility of ripping faster.
  15. looks nice on paper, but ive never seen a big win on this game and its probably ultra rare. This might just end up being a wager slot.
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