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Independent crypto casino reviews & a live jackpot watch

Licensing-checked reviews scored with a published six-part methodology — The Jackpot Score — plus a curated board of verified progressive jackpots. We never take payment for a good score. 18+ · Gamble responsibly.

Jackpot Watch

Verified jackpots are being onboarded

Jackpot Watch only lists progressive totals we can confirm against a real, checkable source — a direct operator data-share, our own manual verification against the operator's public jackpot page, or a licensed jackpot-data feed. We do not publish an invented or scraped number to fill the board. As sources come online, verified totals appear here, each stamped with the time and method of verification.

How we verify jackpots →

Research-based methodverified facts, sources dated on the page
Fixed, published scorecardsix weighted criteria, auditable
Ratings never for saleaffiliate money can't move a score
How we reviewRead the full method →

Bitcoin & crypto casino reviews you can trust

Bit Jackpot reviews Bitcoin and crypto casinos on a fixed, published Jackpot Score scorecard — licensing, payout speed, bonus value, game range and crypto support — so every rating is auditable and never for sale. Explore our crypto casino reviews, the best crypto casinos and the latest verified bonuses, all reported research-first with responsible-gambling context. 18+.

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Best crypto casinos right now

Advertising disclosure: we may earn a commission if you sign up through links on this page. It never changes our scores or what we publish — see our affiliate disclosure.

Crypto casino comparison
#CasinoJackpot ScoreCryptosHeadline bonusPayoutLicense
1 BitStarz 8.0 12 coins direct + 300+ via exchange Up to 5 BTC / $2,000 + 180 free spins ~8.5–10 min crypto (aggregated) Curacao Gaming Authority · OGL/2024/165/0185 Visit

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Our method

How we score a crypto casino

We don't copy-paste operator marketing. Each casino is scored from verified, published facts against a fixed weighted rubric — so a rating can't be quietly bought.

01

Verify the facts

Licensing and regulator, ownership, accepted cryptos, game range, KYC policy and stated payout terms — checked against public sources, dated on the page.

02

Score the Jackpot Score

Six weighted criteria — Trust & Licensing, Bonus Value, Game Range, Payout Speed, Crypto Support, Support/UX — combine into one auditable overall score.

03

Disclose everything

Affiliate links are labelled, wagering requirements are shown up front, and restricted regions are flagged. Ratings are never for sale.

Read the full methodology →

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On this page. Bit Jackpot is an independent crypto casino review publication. This guide explains what we do, how we score, and how to use the site. Everything below is written and edited by the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team, and none of it is financial or gambling advice. You must be 18 or older (or the legal age where you live, if that is higher) to use any operator we review.

About Bit Jackpot — Independent Crypto Casino Reviews

Bit Jackpot is an independent publication that reviews crypto casinos and tracks live progressive jackpots. We launched in 2026 with one simple aim: to make the crypto-gambling market easier to judge for yourself, without pretending the house edge doesn’t exist. We are not a casino, a sportsbook, or a payment processor. We don’t take deposits, we don’t hold anyone’s funds, and we don’t run games. We publish reviews, explainers, and tools, and we try to be honest about what we can verify and what we can’t.

The market we cover is noisy. Hundreds of operators accept Bitcoin, Ethereum, and stablecoins, many of them licensed in jurisdictions most players have never looked up. “Top 10” lists are often ranked by whoever pays the most, and headline bonus numbers are written to look larger than they are. Our answer to that is a process you can inspect. Every casino we review is scored with a published, six-part method we call the Jackpot Score, and we don’t publish a score until a licence has been checked against the issuing regulator’s own public register.

That independence is the whole point. Bit Jackpot earns money through disclosed affiliate partnerships and display advertising, but those relationships never move a score. A casino cannot buy a higher rating, and a licence suspension or a pattern of unresolved payout complaints drags a score down regardless of any commercial relationship. We spell out exactly how this works in our editorial guidelines and our licensing verification policy, and we keep the two things — commerce and judgement — in separate rooms on purpose.

Alongside reviews, we run Jackpot Watch, a curated board of the largest live progressive jackpots across the casinos we track. We only list a jackpot when we can tie the number to a real, checkable source, and every entry carries a timestamp so you can see how fresh it is. If we can’t verify a total, we leave it off the board rather than guess. That rule — verify or omit — runs through everything on the site, from a licence number to a bonus wagering multiple.

Bit Jackpot has a German and EU focus as well as a global one. Because Germany’s gambling rules restrict which operators may legally serve residents there, our reviews flag whether an operator holds any EU or EEA licence beyond a common Curaçao permit, and we never imply that a casino is legal in a market where it isn’t. If you take one thing from this page, let it be that we would rather tell you less and be right than tell you more and be wrong.

What We Cover at Bit Jackpot

Bit Jackpot is organised into a set of beats, each owned by a desk within the editorial team. We describe the desks rather than a cast of characters, because the byline on our work is collective — the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team — and named, photographed staff profiles are being onboarded as the masthead grows. Here is what each beat produces and where to find it.

Casino reviews. The heart of the site is our operator reviews, produced by the casino reviews desk. Each review runs an operator through the same checklist — licence, payout behaviour, crypto support, game library, bonus terms, and support quality — and ends in a Jackpot Score you can compare against any other casino we cover. Start at the reviews hub or browse the casino reviews category to see the full set.

Jackpot Watch. Our progressive-jackpot board is maintained as its own beat because it moves faster than an evergreen review. The Jackpot Watch board tracks live totals on a documented refresh cadence and timestamps every entry, so you’re never looking at a number without knowing when it was last confirmed.

Bonuses. The bonuses desk reads the terms so you don’t have to. We collect current welcome offers, reloads, and free-spin deals in the bonuses section, translate each headline into its real wagering cost, and link the maths to a calculator you can run yourself. A bonus is only worth listing if its terms are confirmed against the operator’s own T&Cs page.

Slots and provably fair. Our slots coverage explains return-to-player and volatility in plain English and reviews individual titles on their mechanics, not their marketing. Browse slot reviews and the provably-fair category, where we look at games whose fairness a player can cryptographically check after the fact.

Crypto payments. The crypto payments desk covers the part most review sites skip: how money actually moves. That means chains and coins supported, network fees, confirmation times, and the difference between custodial and non-custodial deposit flows. It lives under crypto payments.

Sports and odds. Where operators run a sportsbook, the sports and odds desk covers it — informationally. We explain odds formats and market mechanics and compare pricing, but we do not publish tips or picks. See sports betting.

Learn and glossary. Our reference material lives in two places. The learn hub holds long explainers — how deposits work, what a wagering requirement really is, how to read a Jackpot Score — and the glossary defines the jargon quickly when you just need a definition. Both are free of affiliate links.

Responsible gambling. The most important beat carries no ads and no affiliate links at all. The responsible gambling section gathers national helplines, self-exclusion schemes, and a short self-check, and it is maintained with the same seriousness as any review — arguably more.

Taken together, these beats are meant to answer a single question: is a given crypto casino worth your time and money, and if so, on what terms? Everything else on the site exists to make that answer transparent.

How the Jackpot Score Works

The Jackpot Score is our independent editorial rating, expressed on a 0–10 scale to one decimal place. It is not a user-review average and it is not a popularity contest. It is the weighted result of six sub-scores, each of which is published on the review so you can see how the headline number was built. If you disagree with a sub-score, you can see exactly which one and by how much it moved the total.

Here are the six components and the exact weights we apply. They total 100%, and we do not change them from one review to the next.

Sub-score Weight What it measures
Licensing & Safety 25% Whether a valid licence is verified against the regulator’s own register, plus account-security and fairness signals.
Payout Speed 20% How quickly verified withdrawals actually clear, based on real data points or credibly aggregated player reports.
Crypto Support 20% Range of chains and coins, deposit and withdrawal handling, network-fee treatment, and confirmation expectations.
Game Selection 15% Depth and quality of the slots, table games, live games, and providers on offer.
Bonus Value 10% The real value of promotions after wagering requirements, caps, game weighting, and time limits.
Customer Support 10% Availability, responsiveness, and the quality of answers when something goes wrong.
Total 100% Weighted average, rounded to one decimal place.

Licensing & Safety carries the most weight for a reason: it is the difference between a bad night and a lost balance you can never recover. If an operator can’t clear this bar, nothing else it does can rescue the score. Payout Speed and Crypto Support each carry a fifth of the total because, for a crypto player, the point of the exercise is getting your winnings back in your wallet without friction. Game Selection matters, but a huge library at an operator that won’t pay is worthless, which is why it sits below the trust-and-money components. Bonus Value and Customer Support round out the score at 10% each — real, but never enough to paper over a weak foundation.

No score is published without a completed evidence checklist. That means: (1) the licence is verified against the regulator’s own public register, not merely taken from the operator’s footer; (2) we have at least one real deposit-or-withdrawal data point, or credibly aggregated player-report data, behind the payout-speed rating; (3) current bonus terms are confirmed against the operator’s own terms-and-conditions page; and (4) a named editor signs off before publication. Only then does the review go live.

Two things the Jackpot Score will never do. It will never change for affiliate reasons — a partnership can determine whether we link to an operator, but not what we think of it. And it will never sit frozen while reality moves: a licence suspension or revocation immediately cuts the Licensing & Safety sub-score, which drags the headline number down the moment we confirm the change. Every score traces back to our published method, so nothing here is a black box. Read the full process at our review methodology, learn how to interpret a rating at reading the Jackpot Score, and compare live ratings across every review we’ve published.

How Jackpot Watch Works

Jackpot Watch is a curated board of the largest live progressive jackpots across the crypto casinos we track. Progressive jackpots grow as players wager, sometimes into seven figures, and they’re one of the few numbers in this market that people genuinely want updated in near-real time. That’s exactly why they’re easy to fake — a big, moving figure looks authoritative even when it’s invented. Our board exists to give you totals you can actually trust, each one tied to a source and a timestamp.

We source jackpot figures in a strict order of preference. First choice is a direct data-share from the operator or an affiliate feed the operator authorises. Where that isn’t available, we fall back to manual editorial verification: a member of the team checks the figure against the operator’s own public jackpot page and records it. As a third option, we use a partner odds-and-casino-data API that licenses jackpot data. What we never do is scrape a site in violation of its terms of service, and what we never, ever do is make a number up. There is no magic industry-wide “live jackpot API” that reads every casino at once; anyone claiming otherwise is guessing, and we won’t pretend the plumbing is tidier than it is.

Every entry on the board is tagged with how and when it was confirmed — think “Verified [time] via [source].” Our default refresh cadence is every six hours, which is frequent enough to be useful and honest about the fact that these figures are snapshots, not a live wire into the operator’s server. If an entry passes twice the cadence without a fresh confirmation, we don’t quietly leave the old number sitting there looking current. Instead it switches to a staleness banner — “Last confirmed [time] — may be outdated” — so you always know whether you’re looking at something current or something we haven’t been able to re-check yet.

You’ll also notice that some casinos we review don’t appear on Jackpot Watch at all. That’s deliberate. If an operator doesn’t provide a reliable, checkable jackpot source, we don’t invent one to fill the gap. A missing casino isn’t a snub; it’s an honesty tax we’re willing to pay. At launch the board shows only entries we can stand behind, and we would rather ship a shorter, trustworthy board than a longer one padded with figures we can’t defend.

Jackpot Watch is a starting point for research, not a prompt to chase a number. A large progressive is still a game with a house edge, and the odds of hitting it are very long. Treat the board as a map of what’s out there, check the timestamp before you act on any figure, and read the sourcing rules in full at our methodology. The live board itself lives at Jackpot Watch.

Crypto Payments at Crypto Casinos

“Accepts crypto” is one of the most overloaded phrases in this industry. It can mean an operator takes Bitcoin only, or a dozen coins across several chains; it can mean instant-feeling deposits and same-hour withdrawals, or a custodial system that behaves more like a bank than a wallet. The crypto payments beat exists to unpack that phrase, because the payment layer is where a lot of the real player experience — good and bad — actually happens.

On the coins and chains side, most crypto casinos support Bitcoin and Ethereum, and a large share add stablecoins such as USDT or USDC and a handful of alternatives like Litecoin or Tron-based tokens. What matters isn’t just the logo on the cashier page but the network behind it. The same “USDT” can ride Ethereum, Tron, or another chain, and each choice carries different fees and confirmation behaviour. Sending the wrong token to the wrong network is one of the most common ways players lose funds, and no casino can reverse it, so our reviews note which networks an operator actually supports rather than treating a coin as a single thing.

Network fees are the next trap. A casino may advertise “no fees,” but the blockchain itself charges to process a transaction, and on a congested network that cost can spike. Small deposits can be eaten alive by fees that made sense at a larger size, which is why we point readers to the crypto fee estimator to sanity-check what a transfer will actually cost before they send it. For spot-price context in deposit widgets we reference Binance’s public market API data, cached for roughly a minute — enough to show a sensible fiat estimate without pretending we can quote an exact exchange rate to the second.

Confirmation times are equally worth understanding. A deposit isn’t usually credited until the network confirms it, and different chains confirm at very different speeds. A Bitcoin deposit might wait for several block confirmations; a faster chain may clear in seconds. Reputable operators tell you how many confirmations they require, and we treat that transparency as a positive signal in the Crypto Support sub-score.

Finally, the custodial-versus-non-custodial distinction. Most crypto casinos are custodial: you send funds to a deposit address the operator controls, and your on-site balance is really a claim against the operator rather than coins you hold. That’s normal, but it means the operator’s licence, security, and payout record matter enormously — you are trusting them with real money, not just playing with your own wallet. A smaller number of platforms use non-custodial or on-chain models with different trade-offs. Either way, “accepts crypto” hides a lot of important detail, and our job is to surface it. If you’re new to any of this, start with how crypto deposits work, then read the payment section of any individual review before you fund an account.

Licensing — What “Licensed” Actually Means

A licence badge in a casino’s footer tells you less than most players assume. Licences vary enormously in what they require of an operator and what protection they offer you, and a logo alone proves nothing — it has to be checked against the regulator’s own register. Understanding the differences is the single most valuable habit you can build before depositing anywhere.

The most common licence in crypto gambling is issued by Curaçao. It’s relatively straightforward for operators to obtain, which is why so many crypto casinos hold one. A Curaçao licence means an operator is authorised somewhere and subject to some oversight, but the consumer-protection and dispute-resolution machinery behind it is generally lighter than in stricter jurisdictions. It is not nothing, and it is not a strong guarantee. Treat it as a floor, not a seal of approval.

By contrast, a licence from the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) comes with more demanding requirements around player-fund handling, fairness, advertising, and complaints, and it operates within the EU framework. Other regulators — for example national authorities in various European markets — impose their own, sometimes stricter, standards. When an operator holds an MGA or comparable EU/EEA licence in addition to a Curaçao permit, that’s a meaningfully stronger position, and our reviews say so.

This is where the German and EU picture matters, and it’s easy to get wrong. Germany’s Interstate Treaty on Gambling — the Glücksspielstaatsvertrag, or GlüStV 2021 — restricts which operators may legally serve German residents. Most Curaçao-licensed crypto casinos are not authorised for the German market, whatever their homepage implies. Our reviews state plainly whether an operator holds any EU or EEA licence beyond Curaçao, and we never imply German legality where none exists. If you’re playing from Germany or elsewhere in the EU, that distinction can be the difference between a regulated relationship and no protection at all, so check it before you deposit.

Our own process is deliberately unglamorous. Before a review is published, we take the licence number the operator claims and verify it against the issuing regulator’s own public register — not the operator’s word, not a third-party directory. We record what the licence covers, and we re-check periodically, because a licence that was valid last quarter can be suspended or revoked. If verification fails, the review doesn’t publish; if a live licence changes, the Licensing & Safety sub-score moves immediately. The full procedure, including how we handle disputed or lapsed licences, is documented in our licensing verification policy, and you can see it applied across every operator in the casino reviews category.

Bonuses & Wagering Requirements, Honestly Explained

Bonuses are the loudest part of any casino’s marketing and the least understood. A “100% up to $500 welcome bonus” sounds like $500 of free money. It almost never is, and understanding why is the fastest way to stop overpaying for a headline. The number that actually governs a bonus is its wagering requirement, and once you can read that, the marketing stops working on you.

A wagering requirement is the multiple of a bonus — sometimes the bonus, sometimes the bonus plus your deposit — that you must wager before you can withdraw anything you win from it. If a $100 bonus carries 40× wagering, you have to place $4,000 in bets before the winnings become withdrawable. Because every wager carries the house edge, a meaningful slice of that $4,000 is expected to be lost along the way. The higher the multiple, the more the “free” money costs you in required turnover, and the less of it you’re likely to keep.

Wagering is only the headline term. The details underneath it decide whether an offer is genuinely good or quietly worthless. Game weighting means slots might count 100% toward the requirement while table games count 10% or nothing, so playing the “wrong” game barely moves the counter. Maximum-bet limits while a bonus is active can void your winnings if you breach them. Time limits can expire a bonus before you’ve realistically cleared it. Maximum cash-out caps can limit what you keep even after you’ve met every condition. A generous headline attached to punishing fine print is worth less than a modest offer with clean terms.

This is exactly why we translate every bonus into its real cost rather than repeating the marketing. On each listing in the bonuses section we confirm the current terms against the operator’s own T&Cs before we publish, and we point you to the numbers that matter. The quickest way to judge an offer for yourself is the wagering calculator: enter the bonus amount and the wagering multiple, and it shows the total turnover required so you can see, in one figure, what you’d actually be signing up to. A bonus can absolutely be worth taking — just take it with your eyes open.

Slots, RTP, and Volatility

Slots are the most-played games at almost every crypto casino, and two numbers explain most of what you need to know before spinning: RTP and volatility. Neither is complicated once someone states them plainly, and together they set your expectations far better than any screenshot of a big win.

RTP, or return to player, is the percentage of all wagered money a slot is designed to pay back over a very long run. A 96% RTP means that, across millions of spins, the game returns about 96 cents per dollar wagered and keeps about four. Crucially, RTP is a long-run statistical average, not a promise about your session. You can lose your whole balance on a 97% game or hit a bonus round on a 94% one; RTP tells you the machine’s built-in edge, not your outcome tonight. All else equal, higher RTP is better for the player, and we report it where the provider publishes it.

Volatility (or variance) describes how a slot pays. A low-volatility game pays smaller amounts more often; a high-volatility game pays rarely but can pay big. Two slots with identical RTP can feel completely different — one drips steady small wins, the other swings between long dry spells and occasional large hits. Neither is “better.” It’s about which risk profile suits your bankroll and temperament, and knowing which you’re playing prevents a nasty surprise.

When we review slots we describe RTP and volatility in plain terms, note the provider and the mechanics, and cover provably-fair titles where they exist. Provably fair is a cryptographic method that lets a player verify, after a round, that the result wasn’t altered — a genuine transparency feature we explain in the provably-fair category. To look up a specific game’s published RTP, use the RTP lookup tool, and browse individual titles in slot reviews. Whatever the numbers say, a slot is entertainment with a built-in edge, not an income strategy.

Sports Betting at Crypto Sportsbooks

Some of the operators we review run a sportsbook alongside the casino, and we cover those markets the same way we cover everything else: informationally, and never as tips. Bit Jackpot does not publish picks, predictions, or “value bets” framed as advice. What we do is explain how the pricing works so you can read a betting market for yourself.

The first hurdle for most people is odds formats. The same price can be written three ways — decimal (2.00), fractional (1/1), and American (+100) — and they all describe the same implied probability and the same payout. Decimal odds show your total return per unit staked; fractional odds show profit relative to stake; American odds show what you’d win on 100, or what you’d need to stake to win 100. Once you can convert between them, you can compare prices across sportsbooks that display them differently, and you can see the margin the book has built in.

That built-in margin — the “overround” or “vig” — is the sportsbook’s edge, the sports equivalent of the casino’s house edge. It’s why the implied probabilities of all outcomes in a market add up to more than 100%, and it’s why, over time, the expected result of betting is a loss. Our sports coverage compares how operators price markets and how they handle crypto settlement, but it stops there, on purpose. To move between formats quickly, use the odds converter, and read our full approach at sports betting. Bet for entertainment, within limits you set in advance, and never with money you can’t afford to lose.

Free Tools

Bit Jackpot builds free tools because judging an offer or a payment is easier with a calculator than with a marketing page. None of them require an account, and none of them are gambling products — they’re utilities to help you check the maths yourself before you act. Here’s the set.

  • Wagering calculator. Enter a bonus amount and its wagering multiple and see the total turnover you’d need to clear before any winnings become withdrawable. It’s the fastest way to see what a “generous” bonus actually asks of you.
  • Compare. Put two or more casinos side by side across their Jackpot Scores and sub-scores, licensing, crypto support, and bonus terms, so you can weigh trade-offs instead of trusting a single ranking.
  • Odds converter. Switch any price between decimal, fractional, and American formats, and read off the implied probability, so you can compare sportsbooks that display odds differently.
  • Crypto fee estimator. Get a realistic sense of what a deposit or withdrawal will cost in network fees on a given chain, so a small transfer isn’t quietly eaten by costs that only make sense at a larger size.
  • RTP lookup. Look up the published return-to-player figure for a specific slot, so you’re choosing games on their real numbers rather than their thumbnails.
  • Responsible-gambling self-check. A short, private self-assessment about your own play. It carries no ads and no affiliate links, and it points to real help if you want it.

We add and refine tools over time, and we’d rather ship a small number that work well than a long list of gimmicks. If a calculator ever gives a result that looks wrong to you, tell us through contact — the maths should always be checkable, and we treat tool errors the way we treat any other correction.

Responsible Gambling Comes First

Gambling can be entertaining, and it can also become a serious problem. Bit Jackpot treats responsible gambling as the most important thing on the site, not a footnote. Every game and every operator we cover carries a house edge, which means that over time the expected outcome of wagering is a loss. No system, no bonus, and no jackpot changes that. If gambling stops being fun, or starts costing you money, time, or relationships you can’t spare, please stop and reach out for help.

Help is free and confidential, and it exists wherever you are. In the UK, BeGambleAware runs the National Gambling Helpline on 0808 8020 133 (begambleaware.org); GamCare offers support at gamcare.org.uk; and GAMSTOP lets you self-exclude from licensed British operators at gamstop.co.uk. In the United States, the National Council on Problem Gambling runs 1-800-GAMBLER (ncpgambling.org). In Germany and the wider DACH region, the BZgA service “Check dein Spiel” is on 0800 1 372 700 (check-dein-spiel.de), and the nationwide OASIS scheme, administered via the GGL regulator, provides self-exclusion across licensed operators. Internationally, Gambling Therapy (gamblingtherapy.org) and Gamblers Anonymous (gamblersanonymous.org) offer support to anyone who needs it.

Beyond helplines, a few practical habits genuinely help. Set a deposit limit before you play, not after — most licensed operators let you cap deposits, losses, or session time, and using those tools is a sign of control, not weakness. Decide in advance what you’re willing to lose and treat it as the price of entertainment, the way you’d treat a concert ticket. Never chase losses by betting more to win back what’s gone; that’s the single most common path from a hobby into harm. And take breaks — a cooling-off period is always available at reputable operators.

If you want a quick, private gut-check, our self-check takes about two minutes and asks the kind of questions that reveal whether your play is still in a healthy place. Self-exclusion schemes like GAMSTOP in the UK and OASIS in Germany go further, blocking access to licensed operators for a period you choose, and they’re there precisely for the moments when willpower alone isn’t enough.

One promise underpins all of this: our responsible-gambling pages carry no advertising and no affiliate links, ever. We don’t want a single cent of incentive pointing the wrong way on the one part of the site that exists purely to help. You’ll find everything gathered at responsible gambling. You must be 18 or older — or the legal age where you live, if that’s higher — to gamble at all, and if any of this resonates, treat that as a reason to act, not to feel ashamed.

Editorial Independence and Standards

Trust in a review site comes down to one question: could money have bought what you’re reading? At Bit Jackpot the answer is no, and we’ve built our standards so you can verify that rather than take it on faith. This section is the part we’d most want a sceptical reader to hold us to.

No pay-for-score. Operators cannot buy, rent, or negotiate a Jackpot Score. Commercial teams have no say over ratings, and no review is written or altered as a condition of a partnership. If an operator dislikes its score, its recourse is to improve, not to pay. A licence problem or a pattern of unresolved payout complaints will lower a score no matter how much affiliate revenue is attached to it.

Affiliate relationships, disclosed. We make money partly through affiliate links, and we don’t hide it. Where a link is commercial, it’s disclosed, and our full policy is set out at affiliate disclosure. Disclosure is the point: you should always be able to see where our incentives lie and judge our words accordingly. Commerce decides which operators we can link to; it never decides what we conclude about them.

Independent verification. We verify licences against the issuing regulator’s own public register, not against what the operator reports about itself. Payout-speed ratings rest on real deposit-or-withdrawal data points or credibly aggregated player reports. Bonus terms are confirmed against the operator’s own T&Cs. The method is public at review methodology and the licensing procedure at licensing verification policy, so the process behind a score is open to inspection.

Sources, holdings, and corrections. We cite what we can and distinguish what we’ve verified from what we’re told. Staff who cover this market disclose relevant holdings or affiliations so that personal interest can’t quietly shape coverage. And when we get something wrong, we fix it in the open: our public corrections log records material errors and updates, and we’d rather post a correction than let a mistake stand.

On AI. Our content is written and edited by the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team. Where AI tools assist with drafting or research, the output is reviewed, fact-checked, and signed off by a human editor before anything is published; we don’t publish unreviewed machine-generated copy. We won’t pretend no tool ever touches a draft, and we won’t let a tool publish unchecked either — the standard is human judgement and human accountability. The rules we hold ourselves to are written down at editorial guidelines, and the limits of what any of this constitutes are set out plainly at disclaimer: nothing here is financial or gambling advice.

Meet the Bit Jackpot Team

Bit Jackpot is produced by the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team, and our work carries that collective byline. We’re being straight about where the masthead stands: as a publication that launched in 2026, we’re building out named, photographed staff profiles rather than inventing a backstory we haven’t earned. Those individual profiles are being onboarded and will appear on the team page as they’re finalised. Until then, here’s an honest picture of how the newsroom is organised, because the structure is real even while the headshots are still coming.

The work is divided across a handful of desks, each responsible for a beat. The editor’s chair owns overall editorial standards and sign-off: no Jackpot Score publishes without a named editorial approval, and that responsibility sits here. The casino reviews desk runs operators through the six-part methodology and maintains the review library. The crypto payments desk covers the money layer — chains, coins, fees, confirmation times, and custodial versus non-custodial flows — the detail that “accepts crypto” tends to hide. The sports and odds desk handles sportsbook coverage, informationally, explaining markets and pricing without ever crossing into tips. And the responsible-gambling desk maintains the helpline directory, the self-exclusion guidance, and the self-check, on pages we keep free of ads and affiliate links.

Describing desks rather than a cast of five invented characters is a deliberate choice, and it follows directly from how we treat everything else on the site: we don’t publish what we can’t stand behind. Fabricated bios, borrowed credentials, and stock-photo “reporters” are exactly the kind of thing our methodology is designed to catch at the operators we review, so we’re not going to do it to you on our own about page. When a staff profile goes live, it will be a real person with a real beat and a real record you can hold us to.

What doesn’t change in the meantime is accountability. Every review still requires a named editorial sign-off before it publishes; corrections are still logged in public; and affiliations are still disclosed. The team page will grow, but the standard behind the byline is already in force. You can always reach the newsroom through contact.

Get Jackpot Alerts

If you want the highlights without checking back every day, Jackpot Alerts is our free email digest. It’s a simple, opt-in newsletter: the biggest verified jackpots we’re tracking, notable new reviews and score changes, and the occasional plain-English explainer — delivered on a weekly rhythm, not firehosed at you.

A few things we’ll promise up front, because a newsletter should respect you. Signing up is double opt-in, so you confirm your address before anything arrives and nobody can enrol you without your say-so. Every email carries a one-click unsubscribe, and leaving is instant and permanent — no dark patterns, no “are you sure” mazes. We don’t sell your address, and the alerts stick to what we can verify: a jackpot figure in an email is timestamped and sourced the same way it is on the board, never inflated to make the subject line pop.

You can also set optional threshold alerts if you’d like a nudge only when a tracked jackpot crosses a level you choose, so your inbox stays quiet until something genuinely notable happens. It’s entirely optional, and you can change or switch it off whenever you like.

One thing Jackpot Alerts is not: advice. A big jackpot in your inbox is information, not a recommendation to play, and nothing we send is financial or gambling advice. The games behind these numbers carry a house edge and the odds of a jackpot are very long. You must be 18 or older (or the legal age where you live) to subscribe. Sign up through the form on this page or at the newsletter page; you can also find us as @bitjackpot on X and Telegram.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Bit Jackpot?

Bit Jackpot is an independent crypto casino review publication. We licensing-check every operator we cover, score reviews with a published six-part methodology (The Jackpot Score), and run Jackpot Watch, a curated board of verified progressive jackpots. We are not a casino or a sportsbook and we do not accept payment for a higher score.

Is Bit Jackpot a casino or a betting operator?

No. Bit Jackpot is a journalism and review publication. We do not accept deposits, hold funds, or operate any gambling product ourselves.

How does the Jackpot Score work?

Every reviewed casino gets a 0-10 score built from six published sub-scores — Licensing & Safety, Game Selection, Payout Speed, Crypto Support, Bonus Value, and Customer Support. The full weighting and process are published at /review-methodology/ so every score can be audited.

Can an operator pay for a higher Jackpot Score?

No. Affiliate relationships are disclosed, but they never influence scoring. A licence suspension or a pattern of unresolved payout complaints is reflected in the score regardless of affiliate revenue.

What is Jackpot Watch?

A curated board of the largest live progressive jackpots across the crypto casinos we track, refreshed on a documented cadence (default every 6 hours) and sourced directly from operators or verified manually — never invented and never silently left stale.

Why isn’t every casino’s jackpot on the board?

We only list jackpots we can verify against a real, checkable source. If an operator doesn’t provide reliable jackpot data, we don’t guess.

Is any of this financial or gambling advice?

No. Nothing on Bit Jackpot is financial, investment, or gambling advice. Betting and casino games involve real risk of loss. See /disclaimer/.

How does Bit Jackpot verify a casino’s licence?

We check the licence number against the issuing regulator’s own public register before publishing a review, and we re-check periodically. See /licensing-verification-policy/.

Does Bit Jackpot only cover licensed operators?

Yes. We do not review or promote unlicensed operators.

How does Bit Jackpot make money?

Disclosed affiliate partnerships and display advertising. We never take payment for a favorable review or score. See /affiliate-disclosure/.

How many casinos does Bit Jackpot review?

80+ at launch, scaling toward 200+ within six months, plus a growing slot-review database.

Who writes for Bit Jackpot?

Bit Jackpot content carries the collective byline of the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team, organised into desks — an editor’s chair plus casino reviews, crypto payments, sports and odds, and responsible gambling. Named, photographed staff profiles are being onboarded and will appear at /team/ as they’re finalised.

Is content AI-generated?

Editorial body content is written and edited by the Bit Jackpot Editorial Team. Where AI tools assist with drafting or research, the output is reviewed, fact-checked, and signed off by a human editor before publishing; we don’t publish unreviewed machine-generated copy. See /editorial-guidelines/.

I think I’m gambling too much. What should I do?

Start at /responsible-gambling/ — it has free national helplines, a 2-minute self-check, and self-exclusion tools. That page carries no ads or affiliate links.

What is a wagering requirement?

The multiple of a bonus (sometimes bonus+deposit) you must wager before withdrawing winnings from it. See /learn/wagering-requirements-explained/ and the Wagering Calculator.

What does “provably fair” mean?

A cryptographic method letting a player verify a game round wasn’t manipulated after the fact. See /category/provably-fair/ and /learn/provably-fair-explained/.

Does Bit Jackpot accept crypto payments itself?

No — Bit Jackpot doesn’t process any payments. We review how the casinos we cover handle crypto deposits and withdrawals.

How can I report an error or a licence change?

Use /contact/. We keep a public corrections log at /corrections/ and update licensing status within 48 hours of confirming a change.

How do I subscribe to Jackpot Alerts?

Visit /newsletter/ or use any signup form on the site.

How can I advertise on Bit Jackpot?

See /advertise/. Note: Responsible Gambling pages never carry advertising.

How can I contact the team?

Use /contact/. Hiring is at /careers/.

Does Bit Jackpot have a mobile app?

No. Bit Jackpot is a review website, not an app, and the full site — reviews, Jackpot Watch, and every tool — works on mobile browsers. Where a reviewed casino offers its own native app, that’s noted on the individual review.

Can I use a VPN to access a casino reviewed on Bit Jackpot?

We don’t advise bypassing an operator’s geo-restrictions or a licence’s territorial limits — doing so can void your account, forfeit winnings, or breach local law. Every review states what the operator’s licence actually covers; check it before you play, especially from the EU/Germany (see /licensing-verification-policy/).

How often are casino reviews updated?

Licensing status is re-verified at least monthly and immediately on any credible report of a change. Bonus terms and payout-speed data carry a visible “last verified” date on every review so you can judge freshness yourself rather than trust an evergreen page.

Does Bit Jackpot cover sports betting the same way it covers casinos?

Yes — sports-betting content meets the same licensing-verification standard as casino reviews, but we cover odds and market mechanics informationally. We never publish tips or picks framed as betting advice.

Risk Disclaimer — Gambling Involves Real Risk

Gambling involves real financial risk and can be addictive. Nothing on Bit Jackpot is financial or gambling advice, and no outcome — including a jackpot — is guaranteed. Only gamble with licensed operators, only gamble what you can afford to lose, and stop if it stops being fun. If you or someone you know may have a gambling problem, free confidential help is available at /responsible-gambling/. You must be 18 or older (or the legal age in your jurisdiction, if higher) to use any service reviewed on this site.

Please keep this in mind as you read the rest of the site. Every casino, sportsbook, slot, and bonus we cover carries a house edge, which means that over time the expected result of wagering is a loss, not a profit. Our reviews, scores, and jackpot figures are here to help you make an informed choice among licensed operators — they are not a prediction that you will win, and they are never a reason to spend more than you’d planned. Treat gambling as paid entertainment with a known cost, set your limits before you start, and use the tools and helplines on this site the moment play stops feeling like a choice you’re happy with.

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