โš ๏ธ
shuffle.wiki โ€” Independent Player Warning
Sourced from Trustpilot, Casino Guru, AskGamblers, and published reporting. Not affiliated with Shuffle.com.

Do not deposit a single cent on Shuffle.com.

โœ•
Original games are actively rigged. Players have documented nonce counts that are 2-3x higher than their actual bet count, meaning bets are burned invisibly before a win can land.
โœ•
Withdrawals get frozen the moment you win something real. Small cashouts go through. Large ones go into "review" indefinitely, with zero timeline and zero communication.
โœ•
KYC is essentially non-existent on signup, meaning children and vulnerable people can deposit freely. It only appears when you try to withdraw large amounts, and then it becomes an indefinite stall tactic.
โœ•
Their sponsored streamers play with casino-funded fake balances and are paid to normalise gambling addiction to young audiences on Kick, YouTube and Twitch.
โœ•
A data breach in October 2025 exposed the full identity documents, home addresses, passport copies, and betting histories of the majority of their users.
โœ•
Trustpilot caught them running fake 5-star reviews and formally penalised the account. 54% of real reviews are 1-star. The CEO came from FTX.
This is not a normal casino with rough edges. The documented pattern across hundreds of complaints, on multiple independent platforms, over multiple years, points to one conclusion: Shuffle is built to extract deposits and block meaningful withdrawals. This wiki exists so players know before they find out the hard way.
54%
Trustpilot 1-Star
4.8
Casino Guru Safety
Oct 25
Data Breach
FTX
CEO's Last Employer
๐Ÿ“Š
What Review Platforms Actually Say
Trustpilot 1-Star Reviews
54%
Trustpilot 5-Star Reviews
40%
Casino Guru Safety Index
4.8/10
Fake Reviews Removed
YES
Open Complaints (AskGamblers)
20+

Trustpilot made Shuffle's overall star rating unavailable after a formal enforcement action for fake reviews. Casino Guru independently warns of a disproportionate volume of withheld winnings relative to the casino's size and advises players to use alternatives.


๐ŸŽฒ
The Original Games Are Rigged
Critical issue

Shuffle heavily promotes "provably fair" as their core selling point. The concept is legitimate: a cryptographic system using a server seed, client seed, and a nonce (a counter that increments by exactly 1 per bet) that players can verify after every round. Players have broken that claim open.

The core of the allegation: if you place 500 bets, your nonce should read 500. Multiple players have independently checked their nonce counts and found them reading 1,500 or more after 500 bets. In a legitimate provably fair system that is mathematically impossible. The nonce increments once per bet, always. The only explanation is that the system is consuming results invisibly, burning through nonces until it lands on an outcome unfavourable to the player, and then presenting that outcome as your "result." The cryptographic proof is real. The bet count is not.

"THEY ARE RUNNING A SCRIPT TO CHECK WHEN A BIG WIN HAPPENS AND THEN BURNING BETS IN THE PROVABLY FAIR SYSTEM. I placed 500 bets and provably fair was showing 1,500. Where were my 1,000 bets? You burnt them because I was going to hit something big. Stop playing there, they are literally robbing you."

Trustpilot verified review, 2026
Technical

Nonce counts don't match bet counts

Independently documented by multiple players. In any legitimate provably fair implementation the nonce increments exactly once per bet. A nonce reading 3x your bet count means 2x your bets were consumed without your knowledge, invisibly selecting outcomes.

Statistical

Real-world RTP nowhere near advertised

Players document winning 4 out of 23 spins on a 60% stated win-rate game. The odds of that occurring on a fair system are less than 0.1%. Multiple independent reviewers note there is "not even the notion of RTP" in practice. The server returns what it wants to return.

Alleged

Server callbacks monitor balance in real time

Players allege the platform uses server-side monitoring to track session performance and adjust outcomes when balances grow beyond a threshold, all before the bet registers in the visible provably fair log you can check afterward.

Alleged

Leaderboard races are controlled by bot accounts

Allegations that Shuffle runs accounts placing large bets at minimal multipliers to dominate the weekly $100,000 race leaderboard, ensuring the prize pool never actually reaches real players. The race is reportedly marketing decoration.

Observed

Identical copy-paste responses to every complaint

Every single rigging complaint across Trustpilot and Casino Guru receives the same response: a link to their provably fair documentation. Not one reply has addressed the specific nonce manipulation allegations. That refusal to engage technically is itself a pattern.

Their own streamer

"Please stay away from the Shuffle Originals"

After losing $400,000 in 30 minutes on their own platform, Shuffle-sponsored streamer TheGoobr's final words to his audience were a direct warning to avoid the Originals. Their own paid promoter told viewers to stay away from their flagship games.


๐Ÿšซ
The Withdrawal Hold Pattern
54+ documented complaints

Shuffle advertises "90% of withdrawals in under one minute." That applies to small amounts. The moment you withdraw something significant, a different process activates. The pattern below has been documented independently by dozens of players across three separate review platforms.

Step 1

Large withdrawal goes "in review" with no timeline

No reason. No estimate. No communication. Small cashouts occasionally process, which is deliberate. It gives the impression the system works while keeping significant wins permanently frozen.

Step 2

Re-verification demanded on already verified accounts

Fully verified Level 3 accounts are asked to resubmit ID, then proof of address, then a live video call. KYC that was good enough to take your deposits is suddenly not good enough to return your winnings.

Step 3

Documents submitted. Support goes completely silent.

Players submit every document within hours. Then nothing. Not in 48 hours. Not in a week. Multiple documented cases where support goes fully dark for weeks after receiving everything they asked for, with zero follow-up.

Step 4

Withdrawal processes only after public shaming

Players consistently report being paid within 24 hours of posting on Casino Guru or Trustpilot. One player noted: "The day after this review, they paid. That is not a compliance process." Public pressure is the actual mechanism.

"I requested a withdrawal on March 26. It has been three weeks. Some small ones randomly go through but never the big ones. There is no way to cancel. It just stays there. Support tells me to email. They won't respond to any emails at all. I have fully verified my account. They literally have no reason to not be paying me out."

Casino Guru complaint, March 2026 โ€” $4,800 CAD withheld

๐Ÿ”‡
Support That Vanishes the Moment You Need It

Support is friendly and fast for account setup, deposits, and general questions. The moment a real problem appears, specifically a frozen withdrawal, the behaviour changes. Live chat agents tell players to email. The email goes unanswered. Players who push back via live chat are banned from support with no warning and no reason given.

Documented

Banned from live chat for asking about frozen funds

"I tried to ask for a simple status update through live chat. I was banned from accessing support. Not warned, not redirected. Just cut off. I wasn't rude. I was asking about my own money. That is apparently enough on Shuffle to lose support access entirely."

Documented

Weeks of email silence after document submission

Multiple independent complaints follow the exact same structure: ask for documents, player submits within hours, total silence for days and weeks. Support that is fast to receive your ID and slow to respond about your money is not a support team.


๐Ÿชช
Near-Zero KYC on Signup โ€” Weaponised KYC on Withdrawal

Shuffle operates under a Curacao license, one of the weakest regulatory frameworks in online gambling. Signup requires virtually nothing beyond a username and email. No age check. No identity verification. No address confirmation. A 13-year-old can create an account and deposit cryptocurrency within minutes, completely unchecked.

KYC only activates when you attempt to withdraw significant funds. At that point it becomes an escalating process: first ID, then proof of address, then live video call, then proof of funds. Players who complete every step still report withdrawals stuck in review for weeks afterward. The KYC process is not used to protect players. It is used to delay payments to winning players while doing nothing to prevent underage or problem gamblers from depositing freely.

Regulatory Failure

Curacao license offers near-zero player protection

Curacao is widely regarded as the weakest major gambling license available. No independent dispute resolution. No mandatory player fund segregation. No meaningful enforcement mechanism when casinos refuse to pay. Shuffle chose this license deliberately.

Child Safety Risk

No age verification on signup or deposit

Crypto deposits require no bank account, no credit card, no verified identity. A minor with access to cryptocurrency can deposit, play, and lose with no gate in place. The same streamers Shuffle sponsors have large underage audiences on Kick and YouTube.


๐Ÿ“ก
The Streamer Machine: Fake Balances, Real Harm

Shuffle funds a network of streamers on Kick, YouTube, and Twitch who present gambling as entertainment and a path to wealth. The business model is documented and consistent: the casino provides a starting balance or revenue share, the streamer plays on camera, viewers sign up using the streamer's affiliate code, and the casino profits from every viewer who deposits.

None of these streamers are playing with their own money in the way they imply. The balances are either casino-funded fills, revenue share arrangements, or loans used to manufacture drama. The winnings they show on stream are not cashable in the same way a real player's winnings would be. The losses are subsidised by the casino deal. The entire presentation is a performance designed to make gambling look exciting and profitable to an audience that includes a significant proportion of minors.

"No folks, this is a money-driven business where casinos hold large marketing budgets to approach, contract, and pay streamers who never gambled before to haul in new fresh blood. The money is given as part of a deal to have a starting balance. They can play and roam freely, but there are hidden caveats in the deal they do not tell the audience, which makes it impossible for them to, for example, withdraw their winnings."

FakeStreamers.com โ€” independent streamer watchdog, 2025
How it works

Casino fills and revenue sharing

Streamers receive a starting balance funded by the casino each session. Winnings from this balance cannot be freely withdrawn. The streamer earns a percentage of what their viewers lose using the affiliate code. The incentive is to get viewers to deposit, not to win.

The audience problem

Directly targeting young viewers

Kick's own documentation shows the platform surfaces gambling streams on its front page with only a click-through age warning, no hard verification. Gambling-adjacent game content and community personalities bring in audiences as young as 13. Shuffle's streamers operate in this exact space.

๐Ÿ‘ค
Case Study: TheGoobr
Shuffle's highest-profile sponsored streamer
๐ŸŽฐ
TheGoobr
Kick / formerly Twitch ยท Shuffle Casino exclusive deal (departed late 2025)
Shuffle Sponsored Fake Balances Alleged $3.8M in 90-Day Losses Minors in Audience Exit Scam Alleged
Held a major exclusive deal with Shuffle, described by FakeStreamers.com as "likely the best paid streamer" operating under their brand. Played primarily blackjack at Shuffle, regularly wagering $25,000 per hand on camera.
Community has consistently questioned whether the balances were real. Observers noted he was reportedly never seen wagering more than $500 a hand in a real casino, yet routinely played $25,000 hands on Shuffle's stream. The gap between real-money behaviour and on-stream behaviour is the tell.
In December 2025, a viral clip showed him calling a friend who was in the middle of an exam to borrow $50,000, losing the entire amount at Shuffle blackjack within 20 seconds. The incident triggered widespread calls for Shuffle to terminate his contract. Speculation about whether the situation was staged for engagement or supported by casino-funded balance top-ups was immediate and widespread.
His own public posts revealed $3.8 million in losses over a 90-day period. He claimed multimillion-dollar debts to viewers and other streamers, regularly borrowed money from his audience offering under 2% interest, and was eventually forced to seek a $200,000 sign-up bonus from a rival casino as a "last resort" to service his debts.
After losing $400,000 in 30 minutes on Shuffle Originals, his final words on stream were: "If I could give you all one word of advice, please stay away from the Shuffle Originals." His own Shuffle-sponsored content ended with a direct warning against Shuffle's flagship product.
He started gambling at age 10 by his own account. He later quit a full-time job to stream gambling full-time, citing casino partnership income. After a period of posting about self-harm, he was banned from Twitch and moved exclusively to Kick, where age verification is a click-through. He eventually went missing from social media entirely, reportedly owing over $2 million to community members.
This is who Shuffle chose as their flagship content creator. Someone gambling since childhood, normalising debt-funded losses to an audience with no age gate, on a platform that Shuffle knowingly sponsored throughout the entire spiral.

"Who the fuck keeps lending a suicidal gambling addict, knowing he already owes 2 to 3 millions to other people? Stay safe out there people and do not be a Goobr."

Burningthedice.com, 2026

๐Ÿ’€
October 2025: Your Entire Identity Was Stolen

On October 10, 2025, Shuffle confirmed a major data breach through their CRM provider Fast Track. The majority of their user base was affected. This was not a password leak. This was a complete identity theft package delivered to criminals.

Confirmed stolen

Full identity documents including passports

Passport copies and driver's licenses uploaded for KYC, combined with home addresses and phone numbers. Criminals now have everything needed to open credit lines, commit fraud, and impersonate Shuffle's users under their real names and faces.

Confirmed stolen

Complete transaction and betting history

Every deposit, withdrawal, game, and bet. Shuffle themselves warned users to expect highly convincing phishing emails referencing their specific transactions and betting patterns. The attackers know your financial behaviour better than your bank does.

Confirmed stolen

Every support conversation you ever had

Every message, financial disclosure, personal circumstance mentioned, and support ticket. If you told Shuffle's support anything personal during a dispute, those words are in criminal hands.

Context

The CEO's background: FTX and Alameda Research

Shuffle CEO Noah Dummett previously worked at FTX and Alameda Research before launching Shuffle. Both collapsed in 2022 in a multi-billion dollar fraud that sent their leadership to federal prison. This is the resume of the person whose platform lost your passport to hackers.

If you have ever uploaded a KYC document to Shuffle, you should assume your identity is compromised. Fast Track, the breached CRM provider, held SOC 2 Type 2 certification at the time. That certification did not prevent anything.


๐Ÿค–
Fake Reviews and Active Censorship of Real Ones
Confirmed by Trustpilot

Caught running a fake 5-star campaign

Trustpilot removed multiple fake reviews and made Shuffle's overall score unavailable, a formal enforcement action. Of 967 real reviews remaining: 54% are 1-star. Almost no 2, 3, or 4-star reviews exist. That shape is exactly what a manipulated profile looks like before the fakes are stripped out.

Player reported

Flagging real negative reviews as fake to remove them

Players report Shuffle disputes legitimate negative reviews with Trustpilot to have them removed. One player wrote: "Shuffle flagged my review and Trustpilot took it down. My problem is the same as most people, how is it fake?" A company that flags real complaints is a company that knows the complaints are accurate.


๐Ÿ’ธ
The Welcome Bonus Is a Trap
Hidden

The bonus is not advertised

You have to contact support manually after depositing to trigger it. Start wagering first and you lose eligibility. Most players never know it exists. The casino profits either way.

Effective 70x wagering

35x applies to deposit AND bonus combined

Deposit $1,000, receive $1,000 bonus: you must wager $70,000 before withdrawing. That wagering requirement is what funds Shuffle's operation. The bonus is not a gift. It is a chain that locks your money inside the platform.

Designed to trap

Any withdrawal attempt voids your bonus

Request any withdrawal while a bonus is active and the bonus is cancelled. You cannot safely remove your own deposited funds while bonus funds exist. You are locked in until you have wagered everything.


๐Ÿ“…
Documented Incident Timeline
February 2023

Shuffle launches under ex-FTX and Alameda staff

CEO Noah Dummett and co-founders, several from FTX and Alameda Research, launch a crypto-only casino on a Curacao license. The weakest available regulatory framework was chosen from day one.

March 2024

SHFL token launched

A native token is introduced, adding speculative asset exposure on top of gambling losses for players who hold it. The token has since declined significantly in value.

2024 onwards

Withdrawal and rigging complaints accumulate

Casino Guru issues a standing warning about disproportionately high withheld winnings. AskGamblers begins accumulating formal complaints. Rigging allegations targeting the Original games start appearing in verified reviews.

October 2025

Major data breach: full identity documents stolen

CRM provider Fast Track breached. Passports, home addresses, phone numbers, transaction histories, betting patterns, and support logs for the majority of Shuffle's user base stolen and exposed.

December 2025

TheGoobr incident and streamer controversy

Sponsored streamer TheGoobr borrows $50,000 from a friend in a university exam to gamble on Shuffle live, loses it in 20 seconds. Widespread calls for Shuffle to cut ties. The situation triggers a broader conversation about casino-funded fake balances and streamer marketing to minors.

Late 2025

Trustpilot enforcement: fake reviews removed, rating suspended

Trustpilot makes the overall score unavailable after formal enforcement. 967 remaining reviews show 54% one-star ratings with an unusual distribution suggesting prior manipulation.

2026 ongoing

Fresh complaints continue across all platforms

Withdrawal holds ranging from hundreds to $22,000+ continue to be reported throughout 2026. The same pattern: small withdrawals process, large ones vanish into review, support goes silent, resolution only happens after public complaint.


๐Ÿ’ฌ
Real Player Testimonies
Trustpilot ยท Casino Guru ยท AskGamblers
Trustpilot 2026 $22,000 withheld

"My withdrawal has been pending for 3 days. I completed full KYC. Every document provided and validated. No update, no estimated timeframe, no acknowledgment. When I asked for a status update through live chat, I was banned from accessing support. Not warned. Not redirected. Just cut off. I was asking about my own money."

Casino Guru March 2026 $4,800 CAD withheld

"Requested March 26, still in review three weeks later. Small ones randomly go through, never the big ones. No way to cancel, it just stays there forever. Support tells me to email. They will not respond to any emails at all. I have fully verified my account. They literally have no reason to not be paying me out."

AskGamblers May 2026 Amount undisclosed

"They requested live video verification. I completed it in under one hour. On May 4 they asked for Proof of Funds. I submitted everything. Since then: zero response. No acknowledgment. No status update. A polite follow-up email, no reply. A second firmer follow-up, still no reply. Four days of complete silence after I gave them everything they asked for."

Trustpilot 2026 Nonce manipulation

"SCAM ALERT: they are burning nonces on all original games. I placed 500 bets and provably fair showed 1,500. Where were my 1,000 bets? You burnt them because I was going to hit something big. They also run fake accounts at x1.1 to fill the weekly race leaderboard. The $50k prize, nobody ever sees that money."

Trustpilot 2026 Account closed, balance taken

"Shuffle flagged my review and Trustpilot took it down. My problem is the same as most people, how is it fake? Now my account is closed. Been playing and wagering for months. Account gets closed. My progress is robbed. They are a thief."

Trustpilot 2026 300,000 EUR wagered

"Sapphire Level 4. 300,000 EUR in total wagers. 25,000 EUR net loss. My weekly bonus: 498 EUR. Another session, 6,000 EUR net loss and I get 30 EUR. They treat users like ATMs. When I complained they banned me from all communication with no prior notice. My problem will never be fixed."


Final Verdict: Do Not Play on Shuffle

This is not a casino with a few rough edges or some unlucky players. The documented pattern across hundreds of complaints, on multiple independent platforms, over multiple years, is consistent and deliberate. Shuffle is built to extract deposits and block meaningful withdrawals from winning players.

  • If you deposit and lose, the experience is smooth. That part is designed to work perfectly.
  • If you deposit and win something real, you will find the "instant withdrawals" no longer apply to you.
  • If you ever uploaded your passport, those documents were likely exposed in the October 2025 breach.
  • The positive reviews you see exist in the context of a platform that Trustpilot formally caught running fake 5-star campaigns.
  • The CEO's previous employers were FTX and Alameda Research. Both collapsed in fraud that sent their leadership to prison.
  • Casino Guru rates it 4.8/10 and explicitly advises players to look elsewhere. That is a failing grade from the industry's most thorough independent reviewer.
  • Their own flagship streamer's final words on their own platform were a direct warning to avoid their games.
  • Signup requires no age verification. A 13-year-old with crypto access can deposit right now. Their sponsored streamers are on Kick, where the front page surfaces gambling content with only a click-through age warning.
  • Their Terms of Service let them close your account and keep your funds with no reason required. That clause exists because they intended to use it.
shuffle.wiki is an independent consumer information resource. All information is sourced from public player reviews on Trustpilot, Casino Guru, and AskGamblers, and from published journalism. Not affiliated with Shuffle.com or Natural Nine B.V. Last updated June 2026.