Someone explain Twitch to me

If you visit Stake on a US-based browser, a message will quickly pop up on the site: “Due to our gaming license, we cannot accept players from the United States.” Though Stake doesn’t possess a gambling license in any state, Nikam and other US gamblers easily circumvent this by using VPNs. Promoting gambling sites that cannot operate in the US and making money by referring US residents to them may constitute promoting illegal gambling, legal experts told WIRED.

Twitch is in the middle of a gambling boom, fueled by the rise of so-called “crypto casinos”—websites where gamblers can purchase cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum for use in digital games of chance like slots, blackjack, and baccarat. Sites like Stake and Roobet are paying popular streamers to play the casino games on their channels, sometimes offering tens of thousands of dollars an hour, according to streamers and experts interviewed by WIRED. One gambling website, Duelbits, apparently offered top gambling streamer Adin Ross between $1.4 million and $1.6 million a month to stream slots on Twitch, according to a Discord DM between himself and Duelbits.

One thing it might not be good to take these role models’ advice on? The perils of losing money gambling. Some streamers may be playing with house money. Keeping up the appearance of painless fun, crypto casinos sponsoring these streamers refresh their digital wallets with money, according to videos, leaked chats, and interviews with individuals knowledgeable about crypto gambling on Twitch.

I remember a while back seeing someone stream a virtual actual casino (basically real dealers and the like, but you could play from the internet via some interface, kind of neat, but weird) and thinking it was a pretty grey area legally for a lot of places.

Crypto-based casinos feel like they’d be 100% illegal a lot of places and are using crypto specifically to try to dodge laws by making it harder to track the activity.

Wait till you learn that “throwing” means any bad move.

Gate keeping gamers are nuts, yo:

I really liked their review and insights, but it matched up basically 1 to 1 with own thoughts. I loved the sequel, more than the original, but apparently that’s not a slam dunk conclusion.

Had no idea their original thoughts video generated so much garbage.

I am following a streamer that does this. it broke my heart becuase I know his mother is ill and maybe he need the money, but it can’t end well and it may burn his fame in the future.

puke

Yet another idiot who’s going to learn that the fastest way to lose $100 million is to start a AAA game development studio.

As long as it’s $100 mil of someone else’s money, why worry? Chase your dreams! Call up Bezos, Amazon Luna needs some games.

Hah yeah good luck with that.

He worked at Activision as a Call of Duty level designer before putting on the wig and glasses. It’s not that farfetched that he can make something cool.

Big Name Streamers are a cancer that need to be expunged not encouraged.

Good luck with that.

He wasn’t nearly as prominent at the time, but he definitely had the Dr. Disrespect persona actively posting videos and commentary before he got hired at Activision. It’s part of why they hired him.

Aawww, I hope to be a “Big Name” one day.

Well, we love you Brian but please, never become one of the trash filling up the www.dexerto.com site. Unless, it pays really well. Then, by all means, sell the fuck out.

Let me show this one weird trick to have your name be big…

image

;-)

What the hell is dextero? Looks like some generic news site.

Hahahaha