The W22 2026 leaderboard is live, and Roobet is the story of the week, running away with the top composite while trust burns down around half the field.
We track real player signals — mentions, complaints, big wins, momentum shifts, and community sentiment across X and public spaces. No affiliate deals. No paid placements. No self-reported numbers. If a casino is here, the community put it here.
Here's what the signals actually showed for the week of 24 May–31 May 2026.
W22 2026 Leaderboard Summary
Roobet hit 56.45 composite this week, riding three consecutive weeks of A-list blackjack moments — Xposed turning $100 into $275k on a single hand and TimTheTatMan gifting $10k to chat after a $700k win. Yeet sits at 54.05 and holds the overall number one smoothed position, but a second straight week of silence on the $9k locked-account complaint is doing real damage to the brand that bills itself on paying winners. The rest of the field is a mess: Stake cratered from 48.8 to 31.4 under a four-front credibility attack, Razed is functionally over after a 226k-engagement exposé and a 48-hour blackout, and the fake-balance meta that started at Shuffle is now poisoning trust across half the leaderboard at once.
Top 10 Crypto Casinos This Week
1Yeet
The originals roadmap dropped this week and it is genuinely the most specific, credible product commitment Yeet has made publicly: Hi-Lo imminent, Blackjack queued, full UI overhaul across the catalog. That post alone pulled 13.4k engagements, JamieJGambles signed with a $100k leaderboard attached, and Yeet voluntarily paid out over $16k to cover a rewards glitch when $10k would have been the floor. The product side is delivering. The problem is a $9k locked-account complaint that is now in its second week publicly amplified, retweeted across a dozen accounts, full KYC submitted and no explanation given, and positive mentions dropped 233 on the week despite the strong product cycle. Yeet built its entire identity around paying winners. That is not a slogan you can apply selectively without it costing you, and right now it is costing you in the one metric that matters most: community trust.
2Roobet
Week three of the A-lister win machine and there is still no ceiling. Xposed hit $275k on a single blackjack hand, TimTheTatMan won $700k and gifted $10k to chat, Nadeshot is stacking five and six-figure Keno hits like a Tuesday hobby, and 14 authors drove nearly 477k engagements on blackjack clips alone. Roobet also upgraded its deal with itzKrim and launched a $10k weekly leaderboard, which is the right move: capitalising on momentum instead of coasting on it. The tab that stays open is VIP and withdrawal complaints, now resurfacing in distress-signal format with players tagging Roobet alongside a dozen other casinos in chains of public appeals. That is not a Roobet-specific crisis, but it is a category of player that gets completely invisible when the winning clips dominate the feed, and Jakz has flagged this two weeks running without a public resolution.
3Rakebit↑3
The composite is essentially flat at 44.0 against last week's 44.2, and the story is straightforward: the trust foundation is solid, the volume that was pushing the score upward has dried up. Thirty-five mentions from 11 unique authors is thin, but what those posts contain is genuinely interesting — a $100-to-$8,500 on-chain win and a $200-to-$4,800 Plinko session, with both players explicitly connecting the win to trusting the platform's transparency rather than just crediting luck. That organic loop, where provably fair systems become part of the player's own story, is exactly what Rakebit has been building toward. The gap that needs closing is Big Moments at 11, the lowest score on the board, and the UGC competition posts read more like participation farming than genuine excitement.
4Dicey
Two weeks out of private beta and already sitting top 20 on Fairgambling for weekly deposit volume, with back-to-back record deposit days on top of that. For a brand this young that is not a soft launch, it is a statement. The signal quality in a quieter week held up: the team shipped a player-suggested feature in under two hours, RambleGG came on as a partner off the back of a genuine 3k-to-100k run, and a 2500x hit on the Seamen promo paid out the $500 bonus on top. All of it pointing the same direction — a brand doing the operational stuff right in real time. The one thing worth watching is the VIP manager complaint: a player named DiceyJohnny as unresponsive, said they are done with the platform, and that post lands harder in a week where Dicey's whole brand promise is built on accountability.
5Stake↓2
Four simultaneous credibility attacks and none of them got clean resolutions. The fake-balance meta, originally surfaced through Shuffle's GraphQL API, got redirected squarely at Stake's biggest streamers by name. A 10-part affiliate complaint thread alleging unpaid bonuses, over 200 users locked to withdrawal-only, and direct pushback from Stake's Head of Affiliates and CMO pulled 17.7k engagements and near-unanimous community sympathy. A separate wager-before-withdrawal policy thread generated “bordering on criminal” as one of the most common replies. Stake India's payment infrastructure is buckling, with deposits disappearing through third-party providers. StakeEddie stepped in publicly to deny one specific account restriction and that got the week's highest engagement on the positive side, but one denial in a week of four simultaneous fires is damage control, not damage stopped. Composite dropped from 48.8 to 31.4. The number is bad. The reputational hole is deeper than one week of data can show.
6Rainbet↓1
iCheesur lost $20,000 across 11 consecutive hands of AI blackjack, declared Rainbet the worst site he had played on, and walked. Clip accounts picked it up immediately, the thread hit over 250k combined engagement from 8 authors, and the comment sections filled with people asking what that streak looks like for the regular players in his audience. Rainbet's affiliate machine kept running through all of it — TheGoobr's $600k split double and the Wanted 15k payout are real moments — but when 56 out of 104 mentions are negative and the positive ratio has collapsed to 36%, win content alone is not digging you out. The BrandRisk fight-fixing noise from last week is still in the air, a viewbot accusation against one of Rainbet's deal partners adds a second credibility layer on top of it, and the slips complaint resurfaced again this week without any visible response.
7LuckyFun
Seventeen posts from fifteen authors is about as quiet as it gets, but look at what those posts actually contain: a free bet credited and withdrawn same day, withdrawal speed called out organically without prompting, and someone who turned a $50 prize into an extra $31 before the day was out. That is not a platform in trouble, that is a platform operating cleanly at low volume. The sports betting side generated real signal for the first time this week, with live betting confirmed and the team answering product questions directly in public replies — and if sports becomes a second pillar alongside the originals the ceiling here gets meaningfully higher. The one friction point is a freebet replacement placed at the wrong odds with no confirmation pop-up, then ruled ineligible for wagering: a UX failure and a support comms failure in the same moment, which is exactly the category of issue LuckyFun cannot afford to leave unaddressed.
8Gamdom
Composite falls from 39.1 to 25.9, and the split tells the real story: exactly 12 positive against 12 negative posts, which sounds balanced until you see that the negatives include a player tagging every big streamer on the platform in desperation, a blackjack thread with a hand history posted as public evidence calling the originals a scam, and a complaint about unmet promises from last year still sitting unanswered. The Razor Shark 2500x and an $8k Dark Forge hit are genuinely strong win moments, but the originals are under fire again and Gamdom's public response track record right now is not going to help. One of the complaint threads had people pointing toward a third-party recovery service, which means a player dispute went unresolved long enough that the community started filling the void themselves.
9Winna
Composite dropped to 28.4 from 37.0 and the plinko clipping scandal is not fading. Two separate users this week claimed their accounts were banned specifically for helping expose it, and one of them says they were forced to delete a post before Winna would even engage with their missing earnings issue. The $5k monthly leaderboard, 10% lossback, and 100% commission return are genuinely competitive on paper, and affiliate posts are still pushing the brand. But the complaint-to-praise ratio is almost 1:1, and the complaints are documented and specific while the praise is mostly affiliate-driven. When someone posts “no one's even gonna remember Winna in 3 months” and it goes unanswered in public, that is not a prediction. That is a symptom.
10Rolly Onchainnew
First week on the board and the sentiment tilt is hard to ignore: 77% positive, zero negative, 18 unique authors all circling the same thesis about verifiable outcomes and onchain transparency. That is a different kind of early signal — players talking about an idea rather than clipping wins. The problem is nearly all of it traces back to a single thread anchored by one account, and when your entire positive narrative for the week lives inside one conversation, you do not have community conviction yet, you have a good discussion. In a week where Shuffle's GraphQL API exposed how easy it is to fabricate an entire bet history, the provably fair positioning lands with real weight. Rolly needs that idea to spread beyond one thread and into actual player experiences before the believers get ahead of the evidence.
Live Leaderboard + Casino Profiles
You can see the full interactive rankings and explore dedicated profile pages for every Top 10 casino here. Each profile breaks down weekly momentum, player sentiment trends, strengths, concerns, and direct player quotes.
Why This Matters
Most casino lists are bought or heavily influenced. We built Jakz.gg because we got tired of that game.
Every ranking is generated from thousands of real player posts. The data updates weekly, and we will keep showing both the wins and the complaints.
What's Next
- Weekly updates every Sunday
- Run It Up giveaways launching soon (winners will play on the current top-ranked casinos)
- Deeper analysis and more casino profiles coming
Want the movers delivered straight to you? Follow @JakzGG on X for weekly highlights and early Run It Up alerts.
