Legal & wellbeing note: Online gambling and the use of cryptocurrencies are regulated in many jurisdictions. Nothing here is legal advice. Always follow local laws and platform terms. If gambling is causing harm, seek help (see resources at the end).
What “anonymous” really means with crypto gambling
Cryptocurrency transactions are recorded on public ledgers. They’re pseudonymous, not fully anonymous: activity is tied…
What “anonymous gambling” really means
On public blockchains, payments are pseudonymous, not fully anonymous: anyone can see balances and transaction histories tied to addresses, and identities are linkable once you share personal info with a service (or through other breadcrumbs). That’s why best practice is to avoid address reuse and mind what you disclose.
Privacy coins such as Monero go further by…
What “no KYC” usually means
Many offshore crypto casinos market “no KYC” to signal minimal signup friction (often wallet-only registration) and deposits/withdrawals in digital assets. In practice, KYC can still be triggered later—especially on large wins, suspicious activity, or restricted locations—because AML/CFT obligations apply to gambling operators and their payment partners worldwide. FATF’s standards and red-flag indicators explicitly push VASPs and…