Every casino tells you their deal is good. This page just shows you the arithmetic and lets you move the sliders. Three inputs: how much you wager, what you play, how often you come collect. Everything below updates from one formula you can read.
You wager this much in a month$5,000
What you mostly play
How often you claim (a login, not a bet)
The whole formula, with your numbers in it
house win your play generates (wager × edge)
your Vault rebate (50% of that house win)
what your claim habit keeps this month
Of your 50%, you keep...
Where unclaimed money goes (real May numbers)
Money nobody collects does not go back to the house. It is pooled ($9,477 in May) and shared among the players who kept showing up, weighted toward the most regular. Red is what each group left behind; gold is what the same group received.
red: left behindgold: received
Dropped in (1-7 days)1,362 players
left $8,212
got $23
−$8,189
Casual (8-14 days)143 players
left $448
got $410
−$38
Regular (15-21 days)100 players
left $384
got $1,349
+$965
Nearly daily (22-28)66 players
left $434
got $3,502
+$3,069
Daily (29-31 days)52 players
left $0
got $4,193
+$4,193
Read this part too. The house keeps the other half of its edge, always. Over a month, your expected cost of play is the house win minus this rebate: with daily claims that is half the normal cost, but it is still a cost. The Vault is a rebate, not a way to win. Half your rebate is claimable the day you earn it; the other half drips out over about a week, and each day's drop stays claimable for 24 hours. What nobody collects goes to the players who showed up, never to the house.
A preview: the Vault is not live yet. Edges shown are typical blended rates by game type; your exact number uses each game's actual hold, measured per bet. Formula identical to the production engine (payout = 50% × house win you generate). "Keep" percentages reflect claim behavior modeled on real May 2026 play. Still a casino: the house keeps its edge. Play with what you can afford to lose.