Next scheduled rescrape ... never
Version 2
Last scraped
Edited on 10/07/2025, 04:23:49 UTC
Just a question for some if you have the answers. I see sll the scam accusations towards the casinos for holding funding and/or blocking accounts on KYC failure. So is the casino keeping these funds that players are winning? And is this why there is such an up surge in the KYC bs everyone has been dealing with? Obviously the providers aren't aware of the scam accusations and KYC denials so safe to assume they are clueless on the payout? Now isn't the provider just as liable to pay the player their winnings as the host platforms?
Providers aren't involved in anything financially. The casinos are keeping the money. There's a handful of are some crypto casinos that have been runningdoing more of this lately. You'll see them in scam accusations. It's much more rare outside of the big crypto casinos. You're safe if you are a casino player unless you hit a huge jackpot. Sports players should stay awaybe wary. Anyone that these sportsbooks deem a winner, where they know the chances of getting their money back is slim, is at high risk of having money confiscated.

Version 1
Scraped on 10/07/2025, 03:59:04 UTC
Just a question for some if you have the answers. I see sll the scam accusations towards the casinos for holding funding and/or blocking accounts on KYC failure. So is the casino keeping these funds that players are winning? And is this why there is such an up surge in the KYC bs everyone has been dealing with? Obviously the providers aren't aware of the scam accusations and KYC denials so safe to assume they are clueless on the payout? Now isn't the provider just as liable to pay the player their winnings as the host platforms?
Providers aren't involved in anything financially. The casinos are keeping the money. There's a handful of crypto casinos that have been running this scam since it. It's much more rare outside of the big crypto casinos. You're safe if you are a casino player unless you hit a huge jackpot. Sports players should stay away. Anyone that these sportsbooks deem a winner, where they know the chances of getting their money back is slim, is at high risk of having money confiscated.
Original archived Re: Where does the $$$$ GO on KYC failure
Scraped on 10/07/2025, 03:54:10 UTC
Just a question for some if you have the answers. I see sll the scam accusations towards the casinos for holding funding and/or blocking accounts on KYC failure. So is the casino keeping these funds that players are winning? And is this why there is such an up surge in the KYC bs everyone has been dealing with? Obviously the providers aren't aware of the scam accusations and KYC denials so safe to assume they are clueless on the payout? Now isn't the provider just as liable to pay the player their winnings as the host platforms?
Providers aren't involved in anything financially. The casinos are keeping the money. There's a handful of crypto casinos that have been running this scam since it's much more rare outside of the big crypto casinos.