That's 15 million dollars in dust alone, so it's safe to assume the "normal" funds are many times more. I guess they're simply too rich by now to care about people scraping dust from their
cheating faucet, and I guess the competition from much newer online casinos combined with Bitcoin's price increase may have diminished the inflow of new Bitcoins.
What pisses me off is that this is a casino with no KYC and no wagering requirements. Another one that has gone back to the old ways, you know who it is? Lightlord, whose casinos are also one of the few left without KYC. And I say it pisses me off because I am one of those people who ideologically believe that things work better when citizens organize themselves without government intervention. I think that was the idea behind the creation of bitcoin, and that's how things worked for the first few years.
What happens is that sometimes reality slaps me in the face, and in cases like this, if they were regulated casinos in first world countries with a license, they would have had state or regulatory intervention a long time ago.
And that is a good argument for those who argue that the state, not the individual, is the best guarantee that things will go well.