What casino does TimTheTatman play?
TimTheTatman is a disclosed Roobet partner as of 2026. That's the short answer, and two things in it matter more than the brand name: it is a paid promotion, and Roobet blocks the US and the UK on its real-money product. So the casino he's advertising is one many of his viewers cannot legally use.
The partnership, sourced
TimTheTatman (real name Timothy Betar) is one of the larger crossover creators to take a gambling sponsorship, having built his audience on shooters and variety content rather than slots. He streams on Kick at kick.com/timthetatman, the platform much of the gambling-stream scene now lives on. The casino link is visible there first-hand, in the brand on screen and the disclosure attached to it.
The Roobet tie is a disclosed deal rather than an inferred one. Industry coverage reported in January 2026 that he had signed to run regular Roobet broadcasts (Esports Insider, 15 January 2026). Because it is Roobet and not Stake, his page adds a little operator diversity to a scene otherwise dominated by one brand. Streamer deals change, so treat "TimTheTatman plays Roobet" as accurate to early 2026 and check his current channel before acting on it.
One distinction shapes how you should read any clip. Roobet operates a real-money casino and a separate Roobet.fun social product, and the two serve different markets. A "Roobet" stream can show either, and the version a given viewer is allowed to access depends on where they are. That alone makes "what is he actually playing?" a fair question rather than a settled one.
Is it real money?
We won't tell you what's in any individual person's balance, because we don't know and nobody honest claims to. What we can do is explain how a disclosed deal works and let you read the stream accordingly.
A disclosed partner's session is, by definition, advertising. The operator is paying the creator to play, and on sponsored gambling streams the bankroll is commonly supplied or backstopped, so the financial risk on screen can be artificial. The Roobet.fun split adds a second layer. Where the real-money site is blocked, the social product may be what viewers reach, and a social-coin balance is not a deposit of real money at all. Both point the same way: the wins are what the campaign paid to show, not a forecast of what your deposit would do.
So the honest frame is this: treat a TimTheTatman Roobet stream as a promotion first. For the full set of signals that separate a sponsored or social balance from a real one, see our guide to sponsored versus real balances.
What we don't claim
We report the disclosed Roobet partnership and its date. We do not assert TimTheTatman's private finances, and we don't state he plays "fake money". The heuristics here help you reason about a stream, never convict a person.
Can you play where TimTheTatman plays?
For a large share of his audience, the honest answer is no, not on the real-money casino he's promoting. Three barriers stand in the way.
- US and UK blocked. Roobet's real-money site blocks the United States and the United Kingdom, among other markets. If that's where you are, the casino on screen isn't open to you on that product at all, and a social Roobet.fun version is the most you'll reach.
- KYC at the cashier. Roobet requires identity verification before withdrawal. That's the friction point an ordinary account meets and a sponsored stream never shows you.
- No sponsored limits. A normal account carries none of the supplied balance or high limits a paid streamer plays under. Same logo, very different terms, so the bet sizing and the win rate on stream simply aren't available to you.
The upshot is that the results aren't replicable, by design, and for many viewers the real-money product isn't even reachable. Our own first-hand replicate test for this page, depositing real money and timing a full withdrawal, is currently verifying. Until that withdrawal lands and is dated, we won't mark it passed. You can read what a Roobet account actually involves on our Roobet review.
Where a normal player can actually play
If what draws you to the stream is genuine high-limit play, the useful question isn't "how do I get on Roobet like Tim?" It's "where can an ordinary depositor get comparable play, in a market open to them, and actually get paid out?" That's the gap our testing exists to fill, and it's why we funnel to a casino that clears our withdrawal bar rather than to whatever's sponsoring the loudest stream.
FAQ
What casino does TimTheTatman play on?
Roobet, as a disclosed partner from 2026, with regular broadcasts announced on his Kick channel at kick.com/timthetatman. Because it's Roobet rather than Stake, his page adds a little operator diversity to the scene. Deals change, so treat the casino as accurate to the date we cite.
Why can't some viewers play on Roobet?
Roobet's real-money site blocks the US and the UK and requires KYC before withdrawal, so many viewers can't legally use it and may only see the Roobet.fun social product. If a stream is shaping your own play, free and confidential help is at BeGambleAware.
Sources
- kick.com/timthetatman — TimTheTatman's own channel on Kick, where the Roobet brand and the disclosure are visible first-hand.
- Esports Insider (15 January 2026) — industry coverage reporting his disclosed Roobet partnership and regular broadcasts.
- BeGambleAware — free, confidential advice and the 24/7 National Gambling Helpline (Great Britain).
