Roobet Suicide Case Triggers Scam Flood
Affiliates warned: the same trust issues that burned one can strike others.
In June 2026, a Roobet player's suicide after a $40K withdrawal lock ignited a firestorm of scam accusations, with hairlessEV's post documenting the tragedy amassing over 152,000 impressions in a single day, turning the incident into the defining crisis for the casino that year.
The flood of personal testimonies and boycott declarations that followed made clear that this was not an isolated failure; players and affiliates alike saw it as proof that Roobet's trust issues could strike anyone, with the old tragedy dragged back into the spotlight to warn that safety gaps are systemic.
Locked withdrawals after wins exposed as a repeated scam pattern.
The Roobet crisis of 2026 erupted when a viral post by hairlessEV documented a player's suicide after his $40,000 withdrawal was locked, racking up over 152,000 impressions in a single day and unleashing a flood of identical scam accusations. Players across forums shared the same story—smooth deposits and wins, then instant fund freezes with no recourse—forming a pattern that critics say is not an isolated glitch but a deliberate system. For anyone considering Roobet, these testimonies paint a clear picture: the trust issue here is not about one bad incident but a repeated, unaddressed flaw that has now cost a life.
Exposed fake 2023 transaction turns Roobet’s credibility into a laughingstock.
The suicide of a Roobet player after a $40,000 withdrawal was locked triggered an immediate avalanche of scam accusations across social media. Within hours, hairlessEV's detailed post documenting the case amassed over 152,000 impressions, and the player community erupted with personal testimonies, boycott declarations, and a flood of previously silenced grievances. The incident quickly became the defining crisis for Roobet in 2026, forcing longtime observers to ask if this was the moment the casino's carefully curated reputation would finally collapse.
Central to this crisis is the exposure of what was once touted as a legitimate promotional transaction from 2023, now widely believed to have been fabricated. Players who had long defended Roobet based on that visible payment suddenly found themselves doubting every official claim. For many, this single revelation crystallized a pattern: if Roobet would manufacture proof of a successful withdrawal to appear trustworthy, then nothing the casino says can be taken at face value.
For a player deciding where to trust their money, the Roobet story now offers a stark lesson. The combination of a denied withdrawal linked to a player's death, followed by the collapse of a key promotional narrative, has turned the platform into a cautionary tale rather than a destination. The emotional weight of the suicide case gives the scam allegations a gravity that no marketing campaign can counter.
More harmed players come forward, key figure’s withdrawal seen as admission of guilt.
When hairlessEV's devastating post about a Roobet player's suicide following a $40,000 withdrawal lock went viral, it didn't just spark sympathy—it unleashed a torrent of similar allegations. Within hours, the online community was flooded with scam accusations, personal testimonies from harmed players, and calls for a boycott, turning a single tragedy into the defining crisis for Roobet in 2026.
As more players came forward with their own stories of locked withdrawals and lost funds, the narrative shifted decisively. The departure of a key figure, AllenAeroh, whose withdrawal was widely interpreted as an admission that the platform knew it was in the wrong, only intensified the growing scam consensus. Players now face a critical question: with a cascade of corroborating accounts and a visible exit by an insider, can Roobet still be trusted with anyone's money?
Fading conversation leaves only damning consensus: Roobet is fundamentally broken.
On June 13th, 2026, as the initial surge of outrage over a player's suicide following a $40,000 withdrawal lock began to subside, the community's final verdict was clear: Roobet is beyond repair. The widespread scam accusations, personal testimonies, and boycott declarations that followed hairlessEV's viral post had cemented a collective belief that the platform cannot be trusted or fixed, making it a defining crisis for the casino.
For any player weighing their trust in Roobet, the enduring narrative from this episode is unambiguous—the community now sees the brand as fundamentally broken, and the silence after the storm speaks louder than any initial denial or promise of change.
Wide exposure and platform silence stamp the case as an indelible stain.
On June 13, 2026, a single post by a user known as hairlessEV documenting a Roobet player's suicide after a $40,000 withdrawal lock exploded to over 152,000 impressions in a single day. The story struck a nerve with players who had long suspected that Roobet’s withdrawal processes could harbor hidden risks, and the post quickly became a lightning rod for a deluge of fresh scam accusations, personal testimonies, and calls for a boycott.
As the thread grew, players shared their own accounts of funds being frozen without explanation, of support tickets going unanswered, and of a creeping suspicion that the platform’s policies were designed to trap rather than protect. The raw emotion in these stories—fear, anger, betrayal—painted a picture of a casino that had lost not just trust, but any pretense of accountability.
Roobet’s official silence throughout this crisis only deepened the impression that there was nothing to say in defense. Without a single statement or acknowledgment from the platform, the evidence from players—screenshots, timestamps, withdrawal receipts—became the definitive record. For anyone weighing whether to deposit, the message was clear: what happened to that player could happen to you, and no one at Roobet will answer for it.
Paid promotions roll on while player funds stay locked in withdrawal battles.
A single post on X from user hairlessEV, documenting the suicide of a Roobet player whose $40,000 withdrawal was locked, has exploded to over 152,000 impressions in less than a day, igniting a firestorm of scam accusations, personal betrayal stories, and calls for a boycott that now defines Roobet's 2026 crisis.
Even as the community erupts in anger and grief, Roobet's paid streamer promotions roll on without pause, widening the chasm between the glossy fantasy sold to new players and the harsh reality of funds frozen in withdrawal limbo—a dissonance that players are now calling a deliberate deception.
For anyone weighing whether to trust Roobet, the chorus of firsthand accounts from players who lost everything after hitting withdrawal barriers, combined with the casino’s refusal to pause its influencer hype, paints a damning picture of a platform that prioritizes marketing over customer safety and financial accountability.
Victim of Roobet scam who committed suicide: November 2021 an individual named odug9545 wrote on a known casino regulatory forum [https://t.co/pkXK5i5Ylr] that he had been on Roobet for over a year Upon losing consistently for a year, he finally got lucky one day and won $40,000 and was FORCED to KYC [for such a low amount fwiw] He KYC'd, added all the information, upon which Roobet then just completely locked & closed his account and prevented withdrawal, The user whom I will not dox for privacy reasons has committed suicide just 2 weeks ago due to financial problems and @Roobet still hadn't paid him The information was verified in 2021 by the casino regulatory company lcb at the time & they had contacted Roobet on behalf of the individual, to which no resolve. So when you're asking "how did this casino get rich" you now know what they were doing 5 years ago, You do not hate fake balance streamers like @DougGambles @robertgambaskr @rydurz @ShaneStoffer & more who bait you onto these platforms enough, "we are unable to allow him/her to withdraw" was the OFFICIAL statement from ROOBET to the regulatory Rest in peace to the victim, Message to all Roobet affiliates: You better dot your i's and cross your t's, EV.
@hairlessEV Not to mention Roobet scammed me 5000$ lmaoo.



@hairlessEV @Roobet locked my $100,000 withdrawal after I deposited $200,000 and lost half of it even though I was withdrawing to the same depositing address.
@hairlessEV I lost 200k because of this , industry is fake
@hairlessEV I will not be using @Roobet anymore
@hairlessEV Wow, fuck Roobet, those pieces of shit scammers.