CryptoLinebet earns affiliate commissions. When a reader clicks through to an operator and then registers and deposits, the operator pays us a revenue share, typically 25 to 40 percent of its net gaming revenue from that account for a defined period. That commission funds the testing, the writing, the editing, the hosting, and the coffee.
Nothing editorial. Scores are assigned by the testing team from a scoring matrix that does not include commercial fields. Rankings are sorted automatically from the scores. No operator has ever paid us to raise a rank and no operator has ever succeeded in asking. If a site improves its product, the score moves up; if the product regresses, the score moves down; the commission rate has no entry in that equation.
It changes which operators are worth reviewing in the first place. We do not cover operators that do not accept US or major-EU traffic where we cannot maintain an affiliate relationship; that is a selection bias worth being honest about. It is the reason we review four operators rather than forty: the bar to enter the test set is affiliate viability, and only a handful of sites clear it alongside the editorial bar.
rel="sponsored noopener noreferrer" on every page.The commercial relationships visible to you as a reader are the links you click. The ones that are not visible are our internal rev-share rates with each operator. We do not publish those because they are negotiated commercially; if you are a regulator, researcher, or journalist with a legitimate need to see them, email editor@cryptolinebet.io and we will discuss access under a standard NDA.
If you have a question about a specific commercial relationship, email editorial. We will answer on the record.