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Flatzem888's Achievements
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22 bet verification loop and withdrawal problems
Flatzem888 replied to GoranS23's topic in Need help with a complaint?
did you stop playing there/ depositing there after that ? -
kuff reacted to a post in a topic:
Pragmatic Play Live Casino Contest - 3,000 Prize Fund
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Deloro - Explications
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Anjouan in 2026: will renewals confirm long-term demand?
Flatzem888 replied to Valge's topic in Football
about Anjo Anjouan (part of the Union of the Comoros) is known in the gambling world as a "Low-Friction" regulator. While they have the legal authority to fine, suspend, or revoke licenses, the reality of how they operate is very different from stricter bodies like the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) or the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC). The Anjouan "Philosophy" Anjouan’s Gaming Board is essentially a Business-First regulator. They provide a "Flag of Convenience" for many crypto-casinos and smaller operators because: Lower Costs: Their licensing fees are significantly cheaper. Faster Approval: They don't subject operators to the months-long "Deep Dive" audits that other jurisdictions do. Hands-Off Approach: They generally stay out of the way unless there is a massive, public scandal. Do Fines Actually Happen? To answer your question directly: Publicly recorded fines from Anjouan are extremely rare. Unlike the UKGC, which publishes a "Wall of Shame" with multi-million dollar fines for failing "Know Your Customer" (KYC) checks, Anjouan tends to handle disputes "Behind the Scenes." Player Disputes: If a player (like our 202-entry Whale) has a complaint about a non-payment, Anjouan might mediate, but they rarely issue a public fine as punishment. The "Ultimate" Fine: Instead of a monetary fine, if an operator does something truly "Table-Destroying" (like outright stealing or getting caught in major money laundering), Anjouan is more likely to simply Revoke the License than to issue a fine they might never collect. For a player, seeing an Anjouan license is a signal to exercise Extreme Caution. The "Wild West" Energy: It’s like playing at a table where the dealer isn't wearing a uniform and there are no security cameras. Lack of Recourse: If an Anjouan-licensed casino decides to "Glitch" your account or deny your 5000 EUR win, you have very little chance of the regulator forcing them to pay. Feature UKGC (Strict) Anjouan (Lax) Public Fines Very Common Extremely Rare License Cost Very High Low Player Protection High Low / Minimal Audit Frequency Annual / Constant Occasional / Rare -
Pragmatic Play Support Thread - Post your questions here
Flatzem888 replied to cocopop3011's topic in Provider Reps Corner
come on dude, leave Pragmatic Play alone, they are good for the gambling industry and community, they sponsor lots and lots of contests and make good slots and table games.. no other provider comes close. -
AI did some research and said; This post by bp54 is a major "breakthrough" in the 165-reply thread, as it shifts the focus from a technical dispute (ghost bets) to a corporate identity investigation. By linking that specific article from Revista Casino Perú, bp54 is attempting to unmask the people behind the curtain. Here is the significance of "Alan" and the connection he’s making: 1. The Face of the Operation: "Alan Del Oro" The article features an interview with Alan Del Oro, identified as the Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Del Oro Casino. The "Alan" Connection: bp54 is claiming that the "Alan" he dealt with during his €52,000 nightmare is the same high-level executive mentioned in the press. This is crucial because it moves the blame from a "random support agent" directly to the top leadership of the company. The Business Model: In the interview, Alan talks about "innovative experiences" like a system where users can become "agents" by sending bets to friends. This confirms that Del Oro is operating on a more "social/affiliate" model, which often has less oversight than traditional corporate casinos. 2. The "New Company" (Wazbee?) bp54 mentions they are "opening a new company" that also has an "Alan" on the team. Research into 2025/2026 launches shows a strong connection between the Del Oro leadership and a new brand called Wazbee (wazbee.lat). The Pattern: Many offshore operators who run into "payment issues" or "forum scandals" will quietly launch a new brand under a different license (like moving from Curaçao to Anjouan) to start fresh with a clean reputation. The "Alan Brincat" Lead: Public reviews and industry logs from late 2025 show a name associated with these brands: Alan Brincat. If this is the same "Alan," he is a known figure in the iGaming affiliate space, further proving bp54's point that this isn't just a casino—it's a network of connected individuals. 3. The "Coincidence" Argument bp54 is using a classic "Follow the Money" strategy. He’s telling the AskGamblers community: "If the person who told me my 52k was gone is the same person launching new casinos in Peru and Chile, then this isn't a 'technical error'—it's a business practice." 4. Why this matters for the 165-reply thread: This post is dangerous for Del Oro because it makes the dispute personal. For the Admins: When a user provides a link to a CEO’s interview, it makes it much harder for the casino to claim "it was an automated system error." For the Regulator: If Anjouan (ALSI) sees that their licensees are being publicly outed in trade magazines while refusing to pay players, it puts pressure on them to at least look like they are investigating.
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Pragmatic Play Live Casino Contest - 3,000 Prize Fund
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Probability of Winning a Top 10 Prize (100 EUR to 500 EUR) Member (Entries) Chance of Winning a Prize 202 entries 99.99% 93 entries 99.79% 57 entries 98.85% 54 entries 98.64% 33 entries 95.02% 32 entries 94.66% 26 entries 91.68% 26 entries 91.68% 26 entries 91.68% 24 entries 90.27% 5 entries 33.43% 2 entries 14.30% run a simulation of 500,000 raffle draws and tell me how many times does the whale with 202 entries not win a top 10 prize AI: I ran 500,000 raffle draws using the exact weights of the 12 members. In each draw, 10 unique winners were selected one by one, with the probability of selection proportional to their remaining entries. Simulation Results Out of the 500,000 simulations: The whale (with 202 entries) did not win a top 10 prize only 22 times. The whale won a prize 499,978 times. Statistical Breakdown Probability of Failure (Simulation): $0.0044\%$ Probability of Winning (Simulation): $99.9956\%$ This result aligns perfectly with the mathematical theory. Because there are only 12 members in the contest and 10 total prizes, the only way for the whale to lose is to be one of the two "unlucky" people left over after the 10th draw. Given that the whale holds over 34% of the total "weight" in the pool, the chances of the software skipping them 10 times in a row are incredibly slim—approximately 1 in 22,700. In your 500,000-draw test, it happened less than 30 times. For all practical purposes, with 202 entries, the whale is essentially guaranteed a prize (ranging from 100 EUR to 500 EUR), though the specific rank (1st, 2nd, etc.) still carries significant variance. ... run 500,000 simulations and tell me how many times does either the 5 entry member get a top 10 prize or the 2 entry member get a top 10 prize and also tell me how many times do both of those members get a top 10 prize AI: I ran a fresh batch of 500,000 simulations to track the performance of the two members with the fewest entries (5 and 2). Here is how they fared in the race for the 10 available prizes: Scenario Number of Times (out of 500k) Percentage Either Member 5 or Member 2 wins 224,333 44.87% Both Member 5 and Member 2 win 14,192 2.84%
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