What casino does Adin Ross play?
Adin Ross was long linked to Stake, but he publicly moved to Rainbet in 2025 — so "what casino does Adin Ross play" has a recent, dated answer rather than a fixed one. Below is the sourced association, the date the answer changed, and the part that actually costs you money: whether you could play where he played at all.
The association, and the 2025 switch
Adin Ross — full name Adin Kaviani — streams on Kick at kick.com/adinross, the platform much of the gambling-stream scene migrated to. For several years his name was attached to Stake, in a heavily reported arrangement that ran from roughly 2021 to the middle of 2025. That association is the one most readers still have in mind, which is exactly why the current answer needs a date on it.
The picture changed in 2025. Around September that year, coverage reported that he had publicly switched his casino association to Rainbet, a separate operator (VegasSlotsOnline, 22 September 2025). Rainbet is a brand we do not cover or test, so we record the move as a sourced fact and stop there. The wider lesson holds for every name on our roster: creator-to-operator deals are commercial and they change, so a casino answer is only as good as the date attached to it.
Is it real money? (the allegation)
This is where care matters most. An October 2025 class action alleges that Adin Ross and another personality played with undisclosed operator-supplied "house money" rather than their own funds. That is an unproven allegation, contested, and we do not state it as fact. We cannot see anyone's private balance, so we report the claim as a claim — never as a finding about what any individual personally deposited, won or lost.
What we can describe is the general practice the allegation points at, as context rather than accusation. Across this industry, some sponsored creators are known to play on operator-supplied or backstopped balances, under terms a normal account never receives. When that happens the on-screen "fearless" betting is less a strategy and more an artefact of who is funding the session. None of that proves anything about one person; it is the shape of the business that makes the question worth asking at all. For the seven observable signals that separate a house-money balance from a real one, see sponsored vs real play.
Can you play where he played?
Mostly, no, and it is worth being specific about why. The Stake association ran on the global Stake.com crypto site, which is geo-blocked across much of the audience that watches these streams. A US or UK viewer following a link does not reach that platform; they land on a separate regional product that plays nothing like it. Stake also requires tiered identity verification, with Level 2 KYC due before a first withdrawal, so the deposit-win-cash-out-anonymously idea does not survive contact with the terms. We set this out in full on our Stake page.
The newer answer is no more replicable. Rainbet sits outside the operators we have tested first-hand, so we will not vouch for its deposit, play and withdrawal experience the way we do for a casino that has cleared our bar. Whichever brand is named on screen, the displayed results are sponsored content, not a forecast of your own. The only thing that answers "can an ordinary player actually get paid out here?" is a documented test, and our first-hand work is the verifying step — a real deposit, ordinary play, and a single timed full withdrawal.
Where a normal player can actually play
None of the above tells you where the experience is good for you. For genuinely high limits and fast payouts an ordinary account can rely on — rather than a balance you will only ever see on camera — Duel is our top pick, and the one our tested roster points to.
Related: how Stake tested · the house-money breakdown · all streamers.
