Responsible Gambling
Adult-only and safer-play positioning
This website is intended for adults. Gambling is a form of entertainment with financial risk. It is not a way to earn money, and outcomes are not predictable.
If you are under the legal age for gambling in your jurisdiction, do not use gambling services.
Practical safer-play guidelines
Set boundaries in advance
- Set a deposit limit (daily/weekly/monthly)
- Set a loss limit and a “stop-loss” rule
- Set a session time limit and take breaks
- Decide a maximum budget that does not affect essentials
Avoid high-risk patterns
- Do not chase losses
- Avoid gambling when upset, stressed, or under the influence of alcohol/drugs
- Do not borrow money to gamble
- Do not treat promotions as guaranteed value (terms may limit use)
Keep control of access
- Use strong passwords and device lock screens
- Avoid saving payment credentials on shared devices
- Consider restricting access on devices used by minors
Warning signs of harm
Behavioral indicators
- gambling longer than intended
- increasing stakes to “feel the same effect”
- hiding activity from family or friends
- neglecting work, study, or relationships
- repeated failed attempts to stop
Financial indicators
- using credit or loans to gamble
- missing bill payments
- selling belongings to fund gambling
- panic or distress after losses
If these apply, take action early.
Responsible gambling tools on third-party platforms
Common account controls
Depending on the operator, tools may include:
- deposit limits, wager limits, loss limits
- time limits, session reminders (“reality checks”)
- cooling-off periods
- self-exclusion (temporary or long-term)
- account closure requests
Exact availability and enforcement differ by operator. Check the operator’s responsible gambling section or account settings.
Self-exclusion and third-party programs
Some jurisdictions offer centralized self-exclusion programs. Availability depends on location and regulatory framework. Where such programs exist, users may be able to exclude across multiple operators.
What to do if you think you have a problem
Immediate steps
- Stop gambling for the day and remove access (log out, uninstall apps, block sites).
- Set strict limits or activate cooling-off/self-exclusion on the operator account.
- Ask a trusted person to help you stay accountable.
- Contact support services for confidential help.
Where to find help
Support options differ by country. Common global resources include:
- local mental health services
- peer-support groups such as Gamblers Anonymous
- specialist organizations (availability depends on jurisdiction)
If you feel at immediate risk of self-harm, contact local emergency services right away.
Protection of minors
Household safeguards
If you share devices:
- enable parental controls
- restrict app installs
- use separate profiles
- avoid storing payment methods on shared browsers
Key facts
| Item | Details |
| Intended audience | Adults only |
| Focus | Harm prevention and control |
| Operator tools | Limits, cooling-off, self-exclusion (varies) |
| Urgent help | Local emergency services if at risk |
| Last updated | esFebruary 9, 2026 |



