Last updated: 23.04.2026
Using this site means some information about you gets handled along the way. Nothing unusual, but it’s still worth knowing what’s collected and why. This page lays that out in plain terms, along with how that data is treated under laws like GDPR where they apply.
1. General Information
Using this site usually means some data is created along the way. Sometimes it is something you type in yourself, like an email address. Other times it is the quiet technical stuff that comes with almost any website visit, such as the device you are using or the pages you open.
The site is intended only for people aged 18 or over. It is not designed to collect information from minors. If that kind of data is ever received by mistake, it is not kept once identified.
2. About the Platform
This site does not run gambling services. It works more like an information source, with reviews, links, and general material about online gaming. That distinction matters because any website you visit through a link here will have its own privacy rules and its own way of handling data.
For information collected directly on this site, the site operator is responsible as the data controller.
3. Personal Data We Collect
Most personal information is not collected unless you choose to provide it. What the site may receive is usually limited to a few ordinary categories:
- Contact information: such as an email address when you enter one
- Technical data: including IP address, browser type, device details, and similar information
- Usage information: such as pages visited, time spent on the site, and basic interaction patterns
- Preferences: for example, whether you agree to receive updates or marketing messages
In practice, this is mostly the kind of data needed to make a website work, understand what people use, and avoid sending things they did not ask for.
4. Why Data Is Used
Data is used for practical reasons, not just because it is available. It may help with things like keeping the site stable, answering messages, sending updates when consent has been given, checking how visitors move through the site, and detecting unusual or suspicious activity.
The point is fairly simple: the site needs some information to function properly, respond when contacted, and keep abuse from slipping through unnoticed.
5. Cookies and Tracking Technologies
Cookies help the site remember small details. That might include preferences, session information, or basic activity that helps measure how the site performs.
You can block or delete cookies through your browser settings. Some parts of the site may still work normally, but certain features may feel less smooth or may not behave as expected.
6. Third-Party Services
Some parts of the site may depend on outside providers. This can include analytics services, advertising networks, affiliate tracking tools, or other technical systems. Those providers may handle certain data under their own privacy policies.
The same applies to external links. Once you leave this site, the privacy practices of the site you visit are no longer controlled here.
7. Data Sharing
Personal data is not sold. There are still situations where limited information may be shared with service providers, but only where it is needed for a specific function.
That may include analytics tools used to understand site performance, email services used to manage communication, or cases where legal, safety, or security obligations require action.
The idea is not open-ended sharing. It is limited to what those services need in order to do their job.
8. International Data Transfers
Some service providers may operate in other countries. When data is handled outside your country, appropriate safeguards are used so the information is still treated with a suitable level of protection.
9. Data Retention
Information is not kept forever. It remains only for as long as there is a reason to keep it, such as providing a service, maintaining records, dealing with security issues, or meeting legal requirements. Once that reason no longer applies, the data is deleted or changed so it can no longer identify you.
10. Your Rights
Depending on where you live, you may have rights over your personal data. These may include the right to see what information is held, correct something that is wrong, ask for deletion, limit how data is used, object to certain processing, or withdraw consent where processing depends on consent.
These rights are there so you are not left guessing about what happens to your information.
11. Data Security
Reasonable steps are taken to protect data from unauthorized access, loss, misuse, or alteration. No online system can honestly promise perfect protection, so the focus is on reducing risk and handling information carefully.
12. Changes to This Policy
This policy may be changed when needed. When updates are made, the date on the page will show the latest version.
13. Contact
Questions about this policy or requests about personal data can be sent through the contact options provided on the site.