Not sure if this is the right place, but figured I’d drop it here since the doubledown casino forum tends to delete this kind of stuff real quick.
I saw a post about DoubleDown pop up on Facebook tonight. Looked innocent enough, just another flashy game suggestion. Decided to read more and damn, I did not expect what I found. What I read actually pissed me off.
Apparently DoubleDown is owned by IGT. Yeah, the same IGT that runs real money casinos and physical slot machines worldwide. Except in this case, they’re just using Facebook to run what’s basically a money trap disguised as a “fun” social game. You buy chips with real money, spin their slots, and there’s zero chance of ever getting anything back. It’s not just a bad deal, it’s designed that way on purpose.
Meanwhile, IGT’s real money casinos are out here handing out seven-figure jackpots. Some of the payouts I found were insane.
- Someone in the US won $2.7 million playing MegaJackpots.
- Someone in the UK hit over a million on Tiki Temple.
- Another guy in Florida cashed out over a mil on Wheel of Fortune.
!All legit IGT games. All real money. All real payouts!
But if you're on DoubleDown, you're never seeing a dime. There’s no payout system. They even admit that these are just “social games,” which basically means they’re not required to pay anything. You keep buying chips, they keep collecting, and you get absolutely nothing.
Here’s the kicker - it's the exact same slots like (with certified payout rate):
Texas Tea - 97.35%
Da Vinci Diamonds - 95.27%
Monopoly In The Money - 96.78%
Cluedo - 96%
Enchanted Unicorn - 96.02%
Vegas Baby - 95.27%
With literally no difference. These games all exist in IGT’s real online casinos with certified RTPs - we’re talking 95 to 97 percent.
On DoubleDown, the return rate is literally !ZERO! No wins, no payouts, just pure spending. That's what really worries me.
They’re pushing out these games on Facebook to casual players who probably don’t even realize they’re never going to win anything. Meanwhile, the same company is running real casinos where people are actually making bank.
It’s two sides of the same company - one that pays, one that just drains wallets and calls it “entertainment.”
I saw a post about DoubleDown pop up on Facebook tonight. Looked innocent enough, just another flashy game suggestion. Decided to read more and damn, I did not expect what I found. What I read actually pissed me off.
Apparently DoubleDown is owned by IGT. Yeah, the same IGT that runs real money casinos and physical slot machines worldwide. Except in this case, they’re just using Facebook to run what’s basically a money trap disguised as a “fun” social game. You buy chips with real money, spin their slots, and there’s zero chance of ever getting anything back. It’s not just a bad deal, it’s designed that way on purpose.
Meanwhile, IGT’s real money casinos are out here handing out seven-figure jackpots. Some of the payouts I found were insane.
- Someone in the US won $2.7 million playing MegaJackpots.
- Someone in the UK hit over a million on Tiki Temple.
- Another guy in Florida cashed out over a mil on Wheel of Fortune.
!All legit IGT games. All real money. All real payouts!
But if you're on DoubleDown, you're never seeing a dime. There’s no payout system. They even admit that these are just “social games,” which basically means they’re not required to pay anything. You keep buying chips, they keep collecting, and you get absolutely nothing.
Here’s the kicker - it's the exact same slots like (with certified payout rate):
Texas Tea - 97.35%
Da Vinci Diamonds - 95.27%
Monopoly In The Money - 96.78%
Cluedo - 96%
Enchanted Unicorn - 96.02%
Vegas Baby - 95.27%
With literally no difference. These games all exist in IGT’s real online casinos with certified RTPs - we’re talking 95 to 97 percent.
On DoubleDown, the return rate is literally !ZERO! No wins, no payouts, just pure spending. That's what really worries me.
They’re pushing out these games on Facebook to casual players who probably don’t even realize they’re never going to win anything. Meanwhile, the same company is running real casinos where people are actually making bank.
It’s two sides of the same company - one that pays, one that just drains wallets and calls it “entertainment.”