What Is Rollhub Casino?
Rollhub is a mid-sized crypto casino built on in-house technology, carrying the institutional memory of its predecessor brand Blackjackfun while repackaging under a new identity with a proprietary token (RHUB) and a staking mechanic that blurs the line between gambling platform and yield product. The rebrand happened in late 2024, and the current Rollhub entity launched in 2025. What that history means practically: the platform is not a blank-slate startup, but it is still working through the rough edges that come with rebuilding an interface from scratch.
The operational entity is Satya Code SRL, incorporated in Costa Rica. The gaming license is issued by Anjouan, license number ALSI-032401017-FI3, valid through February 2, 2027. Anjouan has become an increasingly common licensing jurisdiction since 2024, sitting in the tier below the reformed Curaçao framework. It provides a documented dispute escalation path (via the licensing body Gaming Services Provider N.V.) but carries less regulatory weight than the older Curaçao license structure. The Costa Rica incorporation layer is standard for crypto gambling operators and carries no gaming regulatory substance on its own.
Rollhub supports an unusually wide cryptocurrency menu, well over 100 coins spanning every major blockchain network, including USDT, ETH, BTC, SOL, DOGE, LTC, BNB, AVAX, XRP, and dozens of altcoins. Native blockchain integrations cover Arbitrum, Binance Smart Chain, Ethereum, Polygon, Solana, TON, Tron, Optimism, Avalanche, and Base. That breadth is a genuine operational differentiator. No fiat currencies are accepted, and there is no buy-crypto widget onsite.
The sportsbook is live, covering 16 major sports plus racing (horse, greyhound, harness) and esports markets across League of Legends, Dota 2, Counter-Strike 2, Valorant, Call of Duty, and nine other titles. Odds are powered by BETSY and ODDIN. Sports coverage is wide enough to be useful rather than a token addition.
The RHUB native token is a notable structural choice. Players earn RHUB by wagering, receive it through community rewards, and can stake their crypto balance in the platform's yield program (hourly payouts, capped at 20 BTC total capacity). This is an unusual feature set for a casino this size.
On bankroll, the on-chain hot wallet (that we are aware of) is publicly listed at the Arkham address, and the bankroll registers as medium scale, estimated at over $2.5 million (confirmed by their team). That positions Rollhub as viable for low-to-mid rollers. High rollers running large single-session wagers would be testing that limit.
Mobile experience is rated Good, with no dedicated app. The web experience on mobile mirrors the desktop layout.
We tested Rollhub using our Trust Quintet methodology: real-money deposits and withdrawals, T&C analysis, peer benchmarking, behavioral coherence audits, and reputation monitoring across community channels.
Is Rollhub Legit? Trust, Licensing & Reputation
Rollhub is a structurally operational casino with documented licensing and real payout history, but it carries a meaningful trust concern at the behavioral coherence layer that players should weigh carefully before depositing.
Layer 1: Corporate footprint
The Anjouan license provides a real regulatory address for complaints. Anjouan-licensed casinos can be escalated to Gaming Services Provider N.V. if internal resolution fails, which is a concrete recourse path. It is not the most robust licensing tier in the crypto casino market, but it is a legitimate one with documented procedures. The Costa Rica incorporation is structurally inert from a player-protection standpoint: Costa Rica does not regulate online gambling.
Bankroll verification is possible via the public Arkham wallet link listed above. This is not something most casinos make available, and it is a transparency positive. The on-chain bankroll at medium scale is consistent with the platform's stated payout limits and bet caps.
Community history matters here. Rollhub was previously Blackjackfun. The rebrand carried over an existing player base from Bitcointalk and other channels, where discussions were mixed, positive and negative. This is not an anonymous startup with no track record; it is a platform that has operated long enough to accumulate community opinion, including criticism. Sentiment on the current Rollhub brand is positive on balance, but the Blackjackfun history means the rebrand is not a clean slate.
Layer 2: Behavioral coherence
Our behavioral coherence rating for Rollhub comes in at POOR. This is the second-lowest tier in our five-tier scale. The POOR rating reflects the presence of at least one significant trust concern identified during our behavioral audit, which goes beyond minor policy gaps and touches on how the casino's stated rules and its operational conduct align.
To be direct about what this means in practical terms: the behavioral picture at Rollhub shows meaningful inconsistencies between how the platform describes itself and how it operates. In our own testing, payment behavior was clean and deposits were processed correctly. But the POOR coherence rating signals that our testing scope was not wide enough to rule out friction in edge-case scenarios, and that independent evaluation found material concerns worth flagging.
This is not an "Avoid" casino. It paid out in testing. But a POOR behavioral coherence rating at a casino with a medium bankroll is a signal to keep session sizes proportionate and to not be surprised if unusual situations produce unusual friction.
Layer 3: T&C grade
The T&C fairness grade for Rollhub is FAIR, the second tier on our five-tier scale from CLEAN through HOSTILE. A FAIR grade means a reasonable contract with standard protections present and some minor casino-favored language. The risk level is elevated, meaning specific scenarios carry higher risk for the player even if the contract reads reasonably in most situations.
Here are the specific clauses that carry the most player impact:
Clause 6.3 (fund confiscation): "we may cancel and/or void any of your bets and withhold any money in your account (including the deposit)." Player impact: If Rollhub decides you've violated their terms in any way, they can keep your deposit, not just your winnings. Most casinos in this tier return the deposit even when voiding winnings. This clause does not commit to that. In practice, our testing shows they have not exercised this aggressively, and the casino has indicated they typically allow withdrawals before closing restricted-territory accounts. But the contract gives them the option.
Clause 9.2 (1x wagering on deposit, 8% fee if not met): "There are no withdrawal commissions if you roll over (wager) the deposit at least 1 time. Otherwise we are entitled to deduct a 8% fee." Player impact: Rollhub operates a 1x deposit wager lock. This is low by industry standards and not inherently unfair, but there is a direct contradiction in the document: the FAQ states "There is no withdrawal fee" while Clause 9.2 states an 8% fee applies if you have not wagered your deposit once. If you deposit and immediately try to withdraw without playing, you could face an 8% haircut that the FAQ didn't warn you about.
Clause 3.4 (VPN): "You may not use a VPN, proxy or similar services or devices that mask or manipulate the identification of your real location." Player impact: The contract prohibits VPN use. In practice, VPN access worked fine in both our test sessions. But the contract's position means that if a dispute arises and the casino reviews your access history, VPN use could be cited to invoke Clause 6.3 fund withholding. The risk is at the dispute layer, not the access layer.
Clause 7.1 (inactivity fee): "We will charge you a fee of €5 (or currency equivalent) per calendar month (Inactive Account Fee) if...for twelve consecutive months or more." Player impact: Leave your account dormant for a year with a balance, and Rollhub will drain it at €5 per month. Standard for the industry, but worth knowing if you plan to leave funds on the platform.
Clause 2 (terms modification, zero notice): "Amendments will be binding and effective immediately upon publication on this Website." Player impact: Rollhub can change their terms without any notice period and the new terms apply immediately to all existing accounts. You have no opt-out right other than closing your account.
On recourse: if internal support escalation fails, Clause 23.6 establishes the right to escalate to the Anjouan licensing body (Gaming Services Provider N.V.). That is a real path, though slow. The more useful route for most disputes is the internal escalation chain (support to management, per Clause 23.5), which the casino's response in testing suggests is accessible and professional.
Summary: Rollhub is a licensed, operational casino that pays out at normal session sizes. The POOR behavioral coherence rating is the primary concern and is not explained away by the payment test results alone. Play here within your means, keep wager volumes proportionate to the medium bankroll, and do not leave large balances sitting dormant.
Where Can You Play Rollhub?
Rollhub explicitly restricts players from the United States and its territories, France and its territories, the Netherlands and its territories (including Bonaire, Sint Eustatius, Saba, Aruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten), Australia and its territories, the United Kingdom, Spain, and Cyprus. Most other countries are accepted.
United Kingdom: The UK sits on the restricted list. The UK Gambling Commission requires a specific license for any operator accepting UK players, and Rollhub holds no UKGC license. Rollhub's contract explicitly prohibits UK access. At the account creation layer, there is no geo-restriction popup confirmed in testing, which means registration may technically complete. But completing registration from a restricted territory puts you in direct breach of Clause 3 from the moment of account creation. If KYC is triggered, a UK-addressed ID document will end the account. Funds in the account at that point fall under the discretionary return language of Clause 6.4.
United States: US players are restricted by explicit territory exclusion. The US regulatory landscape for offshore crypto gambling adds a federal layer of complexity for the player, independent of Rollhub's enforcement posture. The casino's own statement that it allows withdrawals before closing restricted-territory accounts is a moderate behavioral signal, but it is not a contractual guarantee, and depositing from a US location is operating in violation of the terms from the first session.
Netherlands: Netherlands and all its territories are explicitly restricted. This is an increasingly common restriction as Dutch gambling regulation (KSA) applies extraterritorially to operators targeting Dutch players.
Australia: Australia is restricted. Australian players face both the casino's restriction and domestic regulatory risk.
Spain and Cyprus: Both are explicitly restricted. EU players in these countries should note that the restriction is listed at the operator level.
Germany, Portugal, Poland, Greece, Switzerland: None of these appear on the restricted country list. Based on the GSC impressions data showing meaningful search interest from Germany, Portugal, Poland, Greece, and Switzerland, players in those countries are within Rollhub's accepted footprint. Standard platform functionality applies.
Everywhere else: The vast majority of markets outside the listed restrictions are accepted. The absence of a geo-block popup means the platform does not actively screen at the network layer, which shifts the responsibility to the player to know whether their country is restricted.
Can You Use a VPN on Rollhub?
The contract says no. The network behavior says yes. The risk sits entirely at the KYC or dispute layer, not at the login or session layer.
Rollhub's T&C, Clause 3.4: "You may not use a VPN, proxy or similar services or devices that mask or manipulate the identification of your real location."
That is an unambiguous prohibition in the contract. VPN use is a terms violation from the moment you connect.
What happened in practice during our two test sessions: VPN access worked without any friction both times. The September 2025 session recorded "everything worked fine" with VPN active. Deposits processed normally, games loaded, and withdrawals completed. At the network layer, Rollhub does not actively block VPN connections.
The casino itself confirmed to us: "VPN is ok. Just hopefully not using it for geo restrictions." That informal policy statement is meaningful, but it is not the contract. The contract says prohibited.
Where this creates real risk: if you are a player from a restricted country (US, UK, Australia, for example) using a VPN to mask your location, your account is in violation of both the geo-restriction terms and the VPN prohibition. If the casino triggers a KYC review at any point, a document showing your actual country of residence will surface both violations simultaneously. Under Clause 6.3, both violations could justify withholding your balance including the deposit. The casino's stated practice of allowing withdrawals before account closure for restricted-territory players is a behavioral signal that reduces this risk, but does not eliminate the contractual exposure.
One additional practical note from testing: some game providers apply their own geo-restrictions independently of Rollhub's platform settings. With a VPN active, certain providers may refuse to load based on the VPN exit node's detected location. Bets interrupted by a disconnection while using a VPN may be voided. This is a session-level operational risk separate from the account risk.
If you are from an accepted country and simply want privacy on your connection, the practical risk is lower but the contractual exposure remains. The POOR behavioral coherence rating means you should not count on the informal "VPN is ok" stance remaining consistent under pressure.
Does Rollhub Pay Out? Withdrawals & KYC Reality
Yes. Rollhub paid out across both of our test sessions, with withdrawals completing quickly and no friction at the cashout point.
Across two sessions totaling around $1,886 in withdrawals (two $500 deposits, both wagered past the 1x unlock threshold), every payout arrived fast. The first session withdrawal of approximately $1,286 in USDT TRC20 completed in under 10 minutes from approval. The second session withdrawal of around $600 in USDT ERC20 completed within 5 minutes of the request. Both deposits cleared within 2 minutes. The stated payout time is INSTANT, and the test results support that framing for standard cashouts.
One structural note from testing: Rollhub applies a 1x wagering requirement on every deposit. This is stated in Clause 9.2, which specifies an 8% withdrawal fee applies if the deposit has not been wagered once. In our sessions, both deposits were wagered past the threshold before withdrawal, so no fee applied. If you deposit and immediately try to withdraw without any play, expect the 8% deduction.
The platform charges no withdrawal commission beyond network transaction fees, which are displayed clearly. Fees vary by blockchain. Ethereum network fees (ERC20) are higher than TRC20 or Solana. The fee transparency is above average: amounts are shown before you confirm the transaction.
Withdrawal limits: The daily limit is $10,000. The monthly limit is $100,000. There is no stated weekly limit. The casino confirmed to us in testing that it has paid beyond these stated limits for verified players: "pay beyond the limits imposed of 100,000 USD monthly." That flexibility is useful to know but is not a contractual commitment.
Manual approval threshold: Rollhub sets a manual review trigger at $2,500. Cashouts under that threshold process through the standard automated flow. Above $2,500, a manual approval step applies. This is consistent with the fast payout times observed in testing, since both our cashouts fell under that threshold. For players moving larger amounts, factor in manual review time.
KYC: KYC was not triggered in either of our test sessions despite cumulative withdrawals of around $1,886. The stated threshold in the terms is that KYC becomes compulsory when aggregate lifetime deposits exceed €2,000 or upon any withdrawal request. In practice, the casino told us directly: "KYC is not asked if user hasn't breached any TOS in real life. No matter of the amounts." And: "Withdrawals can be made regardless of KYC status." That is an unusually player-friendly operational posture relative to what the T&C text suggests. Documents accepted include ID card, passport, driving license, selfie, utility bill, and bank statement. KYC processing time is stated at up to 48 hours once documents are submitted.
The gap between the T&C's formal KYC trigger language and the casino's actual behavioral posture is notable. For low-to-mid session players, KYC has not been an obstacle. For players moving toward the six-figure cumulative withdrawal range, the behavioral posture may shift, and we do not have test data at that level.
USDT is the primary payment rail in our testing and likely the smoothest option given multi-network support across ERC20 and TRC20. Solana and Litecoin are also available and benefit from lower transaction fees and fast confirmations. The coin menu runs over 100 tokens across 10 blockchains, which covers nearly any crypto configuration a player might arrive with.
For players prioritizing payout speed over everything else, Rollhub's track record in our two sessions places it among the fast-payout casinos worth considering in this segment.
Are Rollhub's Games Fair?
Yes on the third-party slots and live dealer library. On the in-house originals, the 99% stated RTP is credible but not independently displayed per game, which creates a transparency gap you should know about.
The total game count stands at approximately 6,000 titles. Slot providers include Pragmatic Play, Nolimit City, Hacksaw Gaming, NetEnt, Kalamba Games, Caleta Gaming, Slingshot Studios, and others. That provider list covers most of the high-variance slot titles players actively seek: Hacksaw and Nolimit City are particularly notable for players who prioritize max-exposure games. Live dealer tables run on Evolution, Pragmatic Live, Ezugi, Vivo Gaming, Live88, Winfinity, Live Vegas, and PlayAce. Evolution's presence means standard and Lightning variants of blackjack, roulette, and baccarat are all available.
The average RTP on third-party slots is listed at 96%, and RTP is displayed at the bottom of each game in testing. That 96% figure matches the provider-published rates. In testing on Sweet Bonanza 1000, the maximum bet for standard (non-VIP) players was set at $16 ($20 with Double Chance), which is a deliberate limit that constrains max exposure per spin relative to platforms that run no bet ceiling on high-volatility titles. This is a bankroll health measure, not a player restriction.
For originals, Rollhub runs 14 in-house titles: Blackjack, Red and Black, Plinko 99, Mines, Crash, Limbo, and Dice99, among others. The Plinko and Mines variants are provably fair, with a hash-based verification system players can check independently. The average stated RTP on originals is 99%, with classic Blackjack at the industry-standard 99.42%. The RTP figures are stated, but per-session RTP display on the originals interface is not available. You are relying on the casino's stated figure. For games like Dice99 where the 99% figure is mathematically straightforward to verify through the provably fair primitive, that is less of a concern. For Crash and Limbo, where variance is high and individual session outcomes are wide, the absence of per-session RTP display is a transparency gap that more mature platforms have solved.
On library size, Rollhub's 6,000 titles puts it in the same range as platforms like Gamdom (approximately 7,741 titles by our last count). It is not the largest library in the Established Platforms cluster but is substantial enough that game selection is unlikely to be a practical constraint for most players.
The combined picture: third-party games are fair by the same standard as any licensed provider title. Originals carry provably fair infrastructure for the mechanics-simple games, a stated 99% RTP for the others, and a transparency gap on per-session display. Players who need to verify every spin's fairness mathematically should stick to the Dice and Plinko variants where the provably fair chain is available.
Rollhub Bonuses, VIP & Rewards
Rollhub's reward structure is functional for long-term wagers but thin at entry level, and it ranks Below average in the bonus dimension within the Established Platforms cluster. If you are coming from a platform like Roobet or Gamdom expecting front-loaded loyalty rewards, Rollhub will feel sparse in the early stages.
Welcome offer: The casino lists a 1000% up to $3,000 welcome bonus. In testing, however, the bonus system was in a transitional state: the September 2025 session found no active welcome bonus in the standard form, with the rewards tab showing level-up bonuses starting at $10,000 in wager instead. This is a known discrepancy between listed offer and live state. Treat the 1000%/$3,000 figure as historically stated and verify current availability in your session before depositing with bonus expectations.
Daily, weekly, and monthly bonuses: A daily bonus is unlocked at signup. Weekly cashback unlocks at $100,000 in cumulative wager. Monthly bonus unlocks at $300,000 in cumulative wager. The calendar mechanic distributes rewards over time: rakeback and weekly cashback pay 20% instantly upon claim, with the remaining 80% split across 7 daily calendar deposits. Monthly bonuses pay 10% instantly and 90% across the following 30 days. The calendar distribution is a retention mechanism that keeps players returning for daily claims rather than receiving a lump payout.
RHUB token: For every $1,000 wagered, players receive 5,000 RHUB tokens, which unlock over time. This is the most distinctive reward mechanic on the platform and the one that sets Rollhub apart from comparably sized competitors. The token's long-term value is speculative, but for players who want exposure to a platform's upside as it scales, RHUB provides that angle in a way most casinos do not.
Weekly leaderboard: A $10,000 prize pool runs weekly. Placement is determined by wager volume during the competition window. Prizes land directly to balance with no wagering requirement on the leaderboard payout. This is a meaningful differentiator: tournament winnings that require no further play to access.
Community voting: A unique mechanic allows the community to vote on how challenge rewards are distributed. This is the kind of feature that either resonates strongly or gets ignored, depending on how engaged you are with the platform's community layer.
VIP program: Entry into the VIP tier requires $1,200,000 in cumulative wager. The VIP XP formula applies a 31% rule: only bets with a multiplier above 1.31x (good win) or below 0.69x (clear loss) count toward progress. This filters out near-break-even bet behavior from contributing to VIP advancement. Perks include level-up bonuses, daily rakeback, weekly lossback, monthly bonus, exclusive VIP deals, and a personal VIP manager at higher levels. Standard mid-tier VIP rewards are absent on the climb toward the entry threshold.
Bonus enforcement: Rollhub's bonus abuse policy is focused primarily on opposite betting across platforms (Clause 18.1). There are no detailed max-bet rules during bonus activity and no game contribution tables in the terms, which means enforcement is relatively simple and less restrictive for players playing normally. The Giveaway Fund, a separate promo mechanism, carries a 20x wagering requirement and a $2 maximum withdrawal cap. That fund is functionally not worth pursuing for withdrawable cash.
For players specifically seeking rakeback as a loyalty mechanism, the structure is present here but unlocks slowly relative to higher-tier rakeback programs.
Rollhub vs Competitors: How It Compares
Rollhub competes in the Established Platforms cluster, a 23-casino grouping of platforms with real infrastructure that serve specific segments well without aggressive share-growth posture. Cluster peers include Stake, Gamdom, Roobet, Rainbet, BC.Game, TrustDice, Shuffle, Cloudbet, and others.
Rollhub's clearest win in cluster rankings is payments: it sits 5th of 23 in the payments dimension, a Strong tier result, which reflects multi-network crypto breadth, fast tested withdrawals, and clear fee display. Its clearest loss is safety: 10th of 23 in the safety dimension, a Weak tier, which tracks with the POOR behavioral coherence rating. The platform dimension is also Weak, sitting 13th, reflecting the live bugs and UX friction documented in testing.
Here is how the benchmark picture looks across key dimensions:
Rollhub wins on: payment infrastructure breadth and speed, cryptocurrency coverage depth, and the RHUB token ecosystem as a player-side investment angle. It loses on: player protection depth (responsible gambling tools are minimal), platform stability, and bonus structure relative to cluster peers who front-load loyalty rewards more aggressively.
Rollhub vs Rainbet
The natural head-to-head comparison is Rainbet. Both are mid-sized platforms with in-house tech stacks, strong crypto payment postures, and minimal KYC friction at standard wager volumes. Rainbet carries a GOOD behavioral coherence rating against Rollhub's POOR. Rainbet's responsible gambling toolset is more developed. Rollhub outperforms on raw crypto breadth (100+ coins versus Rainbet's narrower selection) and on the RHUB token/staking angle for players who want platform exposure beyond gambling. For players who prioritize trust signal consistency and player-protection depth, Rainbet is the cleaner choice. For players who value maximum crypto flexibility and the native token mechanic, Rollhub holds the edge.
Additional cluster peers worth comparing directly: Gamdom for players who want deeper game library and stronger rakeback infrastructure, and Roobet for players who want a more front-loaded bonus structure at similar deposit sizes.
Rollhub FAQ
Is Rollhub legit?
Rollhub holds a valid Anjouan gaming license (ALSI-032401017-FI3, expiring February 2027) and is operated by Satya Code SRL from Costa Rica. It paid out in two live test sessions totaling around $1,886 in withdrawals. The casino is licensed and operational, but our behavioral coherence audit returned a POOR rating, which reflects material concerns beyond the payment test. It is not a scam, but it carries more trust risk than casinos with stronger behavioral ratings.
Is Rollhub a scam?
No evidence of scam behavior emerged in our testing. Deposits processed, games ran, and withdrawals cleared. The POOR behavioral coherence rating signals inconsistencies at the operational level, but scam casinos typically refuse to pay out. Rollhub paid out across both sessions without friction at normal wager volumes.
Is Rollhub rigged?
Third-party slot games from providers like Pragmatic Play, Hacksaw Gaming, and Nolimit City run on provider-certified RNG systems with published RTPs displayed at the game level. In-house originals including Plinko 99, Mines, and Dice99 are provably fair, meaning individual round outcomes can be independently verified using the disclosed hash. Classic Blackjack runs at the standard 99.42% RTP. No evidence of manipulated outcomes appeared during our game testing sessions.
Does Rollhub pay out?
Yes. Two test sessions confirmed fast cashouts: a withdrawal of approximately $1,286 in USDT TRC20 completed in under 10 minutes, and a withdrawal of approximately $600 in USDT ERC20 completed within 5 minutes. The 1x deposit wager lock must be satisfied before withdrawing or an 8% fee applies. Daily withdrawal limit is $10,000 and monthly is $100,000, though the casino has confirmed it processes amounts beyond stated limits for eligible accounts.
Does Rollhub require KYC?
The terms state KYC is compulsory once lifetime deposits exceed €2,000 or upon any withdrawal request. In practice, KYC was not triggered across either of our test sessions despite combined withdrawals of around $1,886. The casino confirmed its operational stance: "KYC is not asked if user hasn't breached any TOS in real life. No matter of the amounts." Withdrawals can be processed regardless of KYC status. For players operating within normal parameters, KYC friction has been low, but the contractual threshold remains in place.
Can UK players use Rollhub?
The United Kingdom is explicitly listed as a restricted country. Rollhub holds no UK Gambling Commission license. UK players who register and deposit are in breach of the terms from account creation, and a UK ID document during any KYC review will end the account. Fund return in that scenario is discretionary under Clause 6.4, not guaranteed.
Can I use a VPN on Rollhub?
The terms prohibit VPN use under Clause 3.4. In practice, VPN access worked in both test sessions and the casino's informal stance is permissive. The risk is at the KYC or dispute layer: if a dispute triggers a review and VPN use is identified, it can be cited to justify fund withholding under Clause 6.3. Players from restricted countries using a VPN to mask location carry compounded contractual risk.
What is Rollhub's minimum withdrawal?
No minimum withdrawal amount is specified in the terms or CCD. Network transaction fees apply and vary by blockchain. Ethereum ERC20 fees are higher than Tron TRC20 or Solana. Very small withdrawals may be consumed by network fees depending on the chain selected.
What is Rollhub's welcome bonus?
The terms list a 1000% bonus up to $3,000. In our September 2025 test session, the active bonus structure had shifted to a wager-based level-up system (rewards starting at $10,000 in cumulative wager) with RHUB token mining ($5,000 RHUB per $1,000 wagered). Verify the current live offer at rollhub.com before depositing with bonus expectations.
What happens if I have a dispute with Rollhub?
Contact support via live chat or email (info@rollhub.com) as the first step. If unresolved, Clause 23.5 allows escalation to casino management. If internal resolution fails entirely, Clause 23.6 establishes the right to file a complaint with the Anjouan licensing body, Gaming Services Provider N.V. That external escalation path is slow but represents the formal recourse option available under the Anjouan license structure.
Closing Verdict
Rollhub is a licensed, operational crypto casino that delivers on its core payment promise at normal session sizes. The platform's cryptocurrency breadth is genuinely impressive, payout speed in testing was fast, and the RHUB token mechanic offers a player-side investment angle that distinguishes it from comparably sized competitors. Those are real positives that show up in the benchmark data: payments ranked Strong, top-5 in a 23-casino cluster.
The concerns are also real. The behavioral coherence rating is POOR, which is not a label we assign to casinos that perform consistently across all operational dimensions. The platform stability issues observed in testing (balance display lag, game loading failures, clumsy wallet UX) are not deal-breakers but are not minor polish issues either. The responsible gambling toolset is thin: self-exclusion is available by request only, and there are no deposit limits, loss limits, or cooling-off tools built into the player account interface. The T&C contradiction on withdrawal fees (FAQ says none, Clause 9.2 says 8% without 1x wager) is a documentation quality problem that should have been caught.
Would we deposit again? Yes, at normal session sizes within the stated country list, with the 1x deposit wager lock acknowledged before withdrawing, and without treating the informal "VPN is ok" stance as a contractual protection.
Rollhub fits the player who holds a diverse crypto portfolio and wants flexibility in which coins to play with, cares about fast no-KYC withdrawals at mid-range volume, finds the RHUB token mechanic interesting, and is comfortable operating on a platform that is still working through platform stability issues.
Rollhub does not fit players who need robust responsible gambling tools built into the interface, want the cleanest possible behavioral trust signal, or are coming primarily for front-loaded loyalty bonuses.
We re-test major casinos like Rollhub periodically and will update this analysis in 2026 as live testing, T&C changes, platform updates, or new community evidence changes our view.











