Casino affiliate revenue
returned to players
Wager Warriors explains casino economics and returns 50% of eligible affiliate revenue to players as Takeback. Takeback can reduce losses from eligible losing months. It is paid periodically, usually modest, and cannot make gambling profitable.
If your goal is big wins or instant bonuses, this site is not for you.
Reviewed by the Wager Warriors editorial team. Last updated May 2026. We earn through revenue share deals and return 50% of eligible affiliate revenue as Takeback.
- Players who want clear casino economics before depositing
- Players who want loss reduction without profit promises
- Players expecting guaranteed wins or hype bonuses
- Players who want promotions as the main value
Understand Takeback
What Takeback is, what it is not, why amounts are modest, and when payouts can be delayed.
Understand how this worksRead Operator Reports
Operator context for Takeback eligibility, bonus traps, withdrawal friction, and known uncertainty.
View reportsLearn Bonus Math
Plain-English guides to wagering requirements, RTP, house edge, cashback, lossback, and Takeback.
Visit academyHow Takeback works
Takeback is funded from affiliate revenue, not from player winnings. If an eligible player has a losing month and the operator pays Wager Warriors revenue share, half of that eligible revenue is assigned back to the player as Takeback.
If an operator pays Wager Warriors affiliate revenue from an eligible losing month, 50% of that eligible revenue is reserved for the player. It reduces part of the loss; it does not erase the loss.
Read first, decide second
Start with Takeback, then check operator reports and bonus math. The goal is to understand risk before any operator visit.
Featured Operator Reports
Report-first pathways before any operator visit.
How the affiliate model works
Most casino recommendation sites earn a commission when a player deposits and loses. The casino pays the affiliate a share of what the player lost - typically 20-40% of net losses. That revenue stays with the affiliate.
Wager Warriors operates on the same revenue share model, with one difference: half of the eligible affiliate revenue goes back to the players who generated it. That return is Takeback.
Takeback only applies to losing months. It is not a rebate on every spin. The amount depends on what the operator pays us, when they pay it, and whether the player's account qualifies. In practice, Takeback is modest - it reduces losses by a fraction, not eliminates them.
What our operator reports cover
Traditional casino review sites rank casinos by bonus size and partner commission. Our operator reports are structured differently. They are written to answer the questions a player needs answered before depositing, not after.
Wagering requirements, game weighting, withdrawal caps, and expiry rules. We do the math so the headline bonus number has context.
How long withdrawals take, what verification is required, and where players have reported delays.
Which regulator issued the licence, what it covers, and what player protections apply in your region.
Whether the operator runs on a revenue share deal with us, and what that means for your Takeback calculation.
Keep learning
Read the reports and tutorials first, then decide where and whether to play.