The Vault · check the math

Don't take our word for it. Run your own numbers.

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.