Do Drake, Adin Ross Win Too Often on Stake.com Slots? Analysis Says Yes

Posted on: March 2, 2026, 07:23h. 

Last updated on: March 2, 2026, 07:23h.

  • Bloomberg says Drake hit big wins on Stake.com above statistical norm
  • Ross’ Easygo slot results exceeded dataset averages
  • Stake denies claims, calls analysis categorically incorrect

Sponsored influencers on crypto casino Stake.com, including Drake and Adin Ross, won unusually large jackpots at significantly higher rates than regular users when playing games owned by Stake’s parent company, EasyGo, according to a Bloomberg Businessweek investigation.

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Prolific gambler Drake, left, and Adin Ross, are both brand ambassadors for Stake.com where analysis by Bloomberg suggest they win too frequently. Stake has denied any impropriety. (Image: Getty/Casino.org)

If the statistical analysis by Bloomberg is accurate, it could raise questions about the company’s sponsorship disclosures and marketing practices.

Stake.com has extensively used influencers to stream casino gameplay on Kick.com, a streaming platform conveniently also owned by Easygo, as a core part of its marketing strategy. Critics say this creates a misleading perception of the risks of online gambling by making statistically unlikely jackpots seem normal.

Stake, for its part, maintains that all games operate under fixed, fair mathematics that are beyond its control.

1,000 Big Wins

Across 500 hours of live slot gameplay across 25 Stake gamblers, Drake hit 1,000 big wins once every 2,500 spins on slots operated by EasyGo, Stake’s parent company, Bloomberg said. That’s roughly four times more than the average rate of once every 10,000 spins. On third-party games, his win rate was average.

Meanwhile, during a three-day stream on Stake’s US sweepstakes platform, Ross hit a $52,000 win (over 10,000x his bet) while playing an Easygo-owned slot game. Bloomberg found his rate of large wins on Easygo titles was higher than the statistical norm, while his win frequency on non-Easygo games was also average – although the sample size was more limited.

Stake disputed Bloomberg’s findings, calling them “categorically incorrect.” The company said comparing win rates across games ignores differences in-game mathematics.

Bloomberg also reported that Drake’s crypto wallet received between $45 million and $50 million per week from Stake at certain points, with one week totaling $190 million, according to a former Easygo employee. Ross allegedly received at least 26,000 Ether (valued at roughly $78 million at the time of transfers) from Stake-linked wallets between 2021 and 2025, according to Bloomberg.

Multiple Lawsuits

Stake is registered in Curaçao and is restricted in several major markets, including the US, UK, and Australia. The company faces multiple class-action lawsuits in the United States alleging deceptive marketing practices and failure to disclose sponsorship arrangements. Stake has denied wrongdoing and is contesting the claims.

Drake and Ross are also defendants in class-action lawsuits related to their promotion of Stake. One proposed class action filed in Virginia federal court alleges the pair deceived consumers into using Stake and also claims their stream views and Drake’s music play counts were inflated using bots and ‘streaming farms. The allegations remain unproven, and Stake has denied wrongdoing.