This phenomenon indeed exists: most platforms offer players three options—92%, 94%, and 96% RTP. But the strange part is that market promotion mainly highlights the 96% version, while a large number of users actually play on the 92% version. It sounds quite ironic, but this is the reality. Even more concerning, many licensing regulatory agencies turn a blind eye to this issue. On the players' side? Most are completely unaware of which version they are playing, with information gaps tightly sealed. This lack of transparency is common in the Web3 gambling ecosystem, which is no wonder that user trust remains low.
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WalletWhisperer
· 14h ago
Basically, it's the classic information asymmetry scheme to cheat retail investors, and even gambling platforms are starting to use this trick.
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BTCBeliefStation
· 14h ago
Basically, it's just a scheme to fleece retail investors—promoting 96%, but actually 92%. Players are kept in the dark, and the transparency is truly exhausted.
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ShibaSunglasses
· 14h ago
Damn, this is just a scam. The promotion claims a 96% success rate, but players are getting hit at 92%, and regulators are still pretending not to see.
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 14h ago
Damn, that's why I don't touch these platforms.
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LightningClicker
· 14h ago
This is the old trick of Web3 gambling: boasting 96% but actually 92%, players are kept in the dark and remain completely unaware.
This phenomenon indeed exists: most platforms offer players three options—92%, 94%, and 96% RTP. But the strange part is that market promotion mainly highlights the 96% version, while a large number of users actually play on the 92% version. It sounds quite ironic, but this is the reality. Even more concerning, many licensing regulatory agencies turn a blind eye to this issue. On the players' side? Most are completely unaware of which version they are playing, with information gaps tightly sealed. This lack of transparency is common in the Web3 gambling ecosystem, which is no wonder that user trust remains low.