Post
Topic
Board Scam Accusations
Re: [Duelbits.com]- $71,338.44 Stolen via Predatory Practices & Deceptive Operations
by
Dyno8050
on 17/05/2025, 23:07:33 UTC
You've made 100 different claims. After one gets shut down, you invent something else, so its impossible to keep up with what it is you're actually attempting to "prove." Meanwhile, you have never once brought concrete evidence to back any of your claims. It's all based on hearsay and taking your word for granted, which I don't, as you are clearly a dishonest person.

See this right here is the problem with using AI to think on your behalf:

* Gaslighting victims with “Netflix charges” as if we're too stupid to see the theft 

WTF is this supposed to mean? Obviously something got lost in translation, but you don't care, you just copy/paste walls of text from Grok in an effort to libel casinos and members of this forum. Truly, you're the one that should GTFO. You will never receive any compensation from any casino based on what you have posted here.

The "Predatory Practices & Deceptive Operations" seems designed to bring the maximum number of members to this thread. If I understand this thread correctly, it is nothing more than sensationalised headlines aimed at trying to bring the Duelbits name down by someone that has a history of posting negatively about other casinos too.

Sorry for necromancing this thread as someone brought it back to my attention on my list thread, and I realized I still mark it as "in progress", and I didn't make any follow up during my weekly sweep. I can see that OP has not been online for a while.

OP, suppose you read from guest mode, do you mind to update us if you followed others' very sound advice and got your refund by the bank? I think the procedure here is to inquire to the payment processor instead of the platform. In most cases, it's the payment processor's duty to handle the refund, not you or the vendor. For example, if you pay with your credit card in a restaurant or some store, and they double-deduct you, you're calling the bank and sit while you let them handle the matter, not inquiring the refund from the restaurant.

With Stake [the restaurant] confirmation that they didn't get the fund, it made things even more logical to pursue the payment processor. Kindly update us if you get this message.

Let me break this down for the puppets who missed the plot.

That “Netflix charges” reference was not AI hallucination. It was a real line from memehunter, who gaslighted a real user named Thamizhan who lost ₹500 via UPI to Stake. Stake ghosted him for 15 days. Live chat was disabled. Emails ignored. And instead of investigating, you defenders mocked him with:

Quote from: memehunter
Sometimes, banks also deduct some overdue charges. Or maybe you have some autopay setup for Netflix and all.
I cannot believe for a second that Stake.com would scam you for $6.

That was the joke, Nutildah. Maybe read the actual case before playing clown. You weren’t even part of that thread, but you talk like you’ve been leading the investigation.

Let me quote the actual user who got scammed:

Quote from: Thamizhan link=topic=5536332.msg65313865#msg65313865
Finally i scammed by stake, i never expect these reply from stake.
...
After reviewing this once more, our team has confirmed that your transaction was not sent to Stake, so you will not be able to receive those funds either.

So he used Stake’s UPI deposit method, got ignored for 2 weeks, and was told the money was never received. No receipt, no refund, just silence. Then you come here acting like I made it all up.

HolyDarkness, your “restaurant” analogy is cute but legally wrong. The NPCI says clearly:

"The end-user customer can raise a complaint with respect to a UPI transaction for both fund transfer and merchant transactions." (Source: NPCI UPI Dispute Redressal Mechanism)

That means Stake, as the merchant, is responsible for supporting failed UPI deposits. They are not a restaurant. They’re a billion-dollar crypto casino laundering money through ghost vendors like "Delight Traders" and "Narangam Enterprises" with zero legal registration. And you want users to just chase banks? Get real.

JollyGood, you say I’m chasing attention. You’re damn right I am. I’m bringing attention to a scam that has stolen millions via illegal payment methods. Stake ghosted me for over 200 days. Duelbits lied about my betting data, then blocked my support access site-wide. And when I expose it? You label it “sensationalised.”

You three can keep jerking each other off in signature campaigns while pretending nothing’s wrong.

But here’s what’s happening in the real world:

- Stake.com scammed real users via illegal UPI gateways.
- They blamed the payment processor that they themselves selected.
- They silenced victims, removed forum posts, and disabled chat.
- They never issued refunds, never shared vendor names, and never followed the law.

And you defend that.

So let me say it again, slowly:

Netflix charges was your excuse.
$6 scams were the start.
But the pattern is global, systemic, and dirty.

Until Stake answers:

- Who were the UPI providers?
- Where are the tax filings for these deposits?
- What happened to the INR collected?
- Why is there no refund mechanism?

Then this is not defamation. This is truth backed by evidence.

Now kindly return to your signature earnings while the rest of us expose the cartel behind your paychecks.

— kingbj21 | I don't hallucinate. I investigate.


You need Michael.