Corinna Kopf on Stake: Sponsorship Math, Real Bankroll and Every Controversy
Who Is Corinna Kopf? Quick Profile, Net Worth & Casino Habits
| Feature / Fact | Details |
|---|---|
| Real Name | Corinna Kopf |
| Born | 1 December 1995, Palatine, Illinois (United States) |
| Based In | Los Angeles, California |
| Streaming Since | 2017 on Twitch; full-time on Kick since the September 2022 casino-stream exodus |
| Main Platforms | Kick (gambling), Instagram, OnlyFans (publicly winding down since October 2024) |
| Estimated Net Worth (2026) | Around US$20 million, mixed across OnlyFans residuals, the Stake retainer and brand deals |
| Known For | Vlog Squad alumna under David Dobrik; the Pouty Girl persona; clearing more than US$1 million in the first 48 hours of her OnlyFans launch in June 2021 |
| Favourite Casinos | Stake, Bizzo Casino |
| Documented Max Wins | About US$32,000 alongside Aircool on a Stake session (re-uploaded to YouTube as "Aircool and Corinna win $32,000 gambling on stream"); a US$5,000 blackjack hand archived on her own Instagram reel in March 2024 |
| Side Businesses | The Pouty Girl brand and merchandise on OnlyFans; minority interests in Vlog-Squad-adjacent ventures; a Los Angeles new-build home she said in October 2024 was the reason she could not yet walk away from her US$300,000-plus monthly OnlyFans income |
| Known Controversies | December 2019 Twitch suspension over a Chanel tank top; September 2022 public feud with Pokimane over crypto-casino ads; October 2024 "retirement from OnlyFans" announcement and immediate U-turn |
Inside Corinna Kopf's Bankroll: From Vlog Squad to OnlyFans to Stake
Kopf's twenty-million-dollar net worth in 2026 is best read as three stacked income lines that arrived in roughly that order. The first line was Vlog Squad ad-share starting around 2017, when she moved from suburban Illinois to Los Angeles to film daily for David Dobrik's YouTube channel. The Vlog Squad's peak monetisation years (2018-2019) were the only time in her career she earned through a traditional creator route — pre-roll ads, brand integrations and a percentage of the channel's merch. When the Dobrik group fractured in 2021 over Durte Dom's assault scandal, she was already pivoting; she did not need the channel.
The second line opened on 8 June 2021, when she launched her OnlyFans on the back of a single tweet — "500,000 likes and I'll create OnlyFans" — and reported more than US$1 million in subscriptions inside 48 hours, the entry tier priced at US$25/month. By her own count to Yahoo and Outkick in October 2024, that account had pulled in roughly US$67 million across three years and was still printing more than US$300,000 a month at the moment she posted the cryptic "no more link in bio" message that fans read as a retirement announcement. A few days later (Outkick interview, 25 October 2024) she clarified she was not retiring — only "slowly stepping away" — because walking away from that monthly cheque while building a new house "would be stupid". The brand has since stayed live on a reduced schedule.
The third line is the gambling line. After Twitch tightened crypto-casino rules in September 2022, the entire high-rate sponsorship pool moved with the streamers to Kick, the platform owned by the same Australian founders who run Stake — a relationship that Bloomberg and Forbes have both reported on, and that ties directly into the Stake-Kick billionaire crossover that put Ed Craven and Bijan Tehrani on the Forbes list for the first time. Kopf joined that migration. She does not break out the size of her Stake retainer in public, but the published bracket for top-tier Kick gambling talent — most clearly disclosed in the Trainwreckstv profile that doubles as a tour of the Kick rate card — sits in six figures per stream for headline names. Kopf is not in the Trainwrecks tier, but the public Stake/Kick math means even a mid-bracket retainer adds seven figures a year.
The fourth, smaller line is the cluster of brand-adjacent appearances around her dating history. Reporting on her one-time relationship with Adin Ross — another Kick gambler now on the same Stake-friendly platform — and her earlier link with Logan Paul gave her several years of free press cycles she repeatedly converted into subscriber spikes. None of that is gambling income on its own, but it is the engine that keeps her audience large enough to be worth a sponsor's retainer.
Where Corinna Actually Plays: Her Go-To Casinos
Kopf's casino rotation is short and very Stake-shaped. The headline brand is the one paying her, and the second is the slot library that matches the Pragmatic Play games her chat asks her to open. Two casinos, in the same order they appear in the table above.
Stake is the first card because it is the only casino she names on stream and the only one her Kick channel routes the affiliate clicks through.
Bizzo Casino is the second card because its 2,400-plus catalogue from Pragmatic, Hacksaw and NoLimit covers the exact slot shelf — Sweet Bonanza, Sugar Rush, Wanted Dead or a Wild — that Kopf opens most weeks on Kick, and it accepts Canadian-dollar deposits without the crypto-only friction her sponsor still pushes.
Inside Corinna Kopf's Stake Contract
The contract itself is private, but its outline is not. Stake's gambling-stream sponsorships moved en masse to Kick in late 2022 after Twitch's 20 September rule update banned advertisement of unlicensed crypto casinos. Kopf, who had already drifted from Twitch to a Facebook Gaming exclusive in late 2019, slid straight into the Kick rotation that Stake bankrolls. The platform itself shares founders with the casino — Ed Craven and Bijan Tehrani built both — which is why the same revenue funnels through both businesses, and why no Stake-sponsored streamer has ever posted a deal with a competing crypto casino while still on Kick's first-party promo grid.
Kopf's content cadence inside that contract is unusual for the gambling tier. The Trainwrecks bracket runs five to seven gambling streams a week and frames every one of them as a casino session; Kopf typically goes live one to three times a week and only occasionally opens slots, with the rest of the time spent on Just Chatting, podcast cross-promo and the occasional Fortnite session. Her Kick gambling content is therefore a smaller share of her hours than it is for the obvious headliners — but it is the highest-paid block on her schedule per minute, which is exactly why the retainer is structured as flat-rate appearance fees rather than the variable rev-share Kick pays its non-sponsored streamers.
What Stake gets in return is straightforward. Kopf's Pouty Girl audience is younger, more US-coastal and roughly 35-40% female by every public Twitch and Kick analytics dashboard that has profiled her; that mix is exactly the demographic Stake's gambling content has historically had the hardest time reaching. So her streams sit inside the same crypto-casino segment that the rest of the Kick gambling roster occupies, but they are aimed at a different viewer.
What Kopf gets is harder to pin down to the dollar. The two public reference points are her own October 2024 statement that she was earning "over $300,000 a month" from OnlyFans alone (Outkick interview, 25 October 2024) and the Kick gambling rate card visible through the Trainwrecks-Stake disclosures, which puts top-tier flat fees in six figures per stream and middle-tier retainers in the high five-figure-monthly range. Kopf has never claimed the Trainwrecks bracket and has never streamed at his bet sizes, so a high-five-figure monthly retainer is the honest read.
The relationship has not been frictionless. On 21–22 September 2022 Pokimane — who had taken a public anti-crypto-casino position the day before — was accused by Kopf in a tweet of having promoted gambling herself. Pokimane fired back the next day in a clip later transcribed by Dexerto, calling Kopf's Stake content "illegal crypto schemes" aimed at a Western audience that legally cannot deposit on the .com domain. Kopf did not soften her position. The Stake retainer continued.
Real Money or House Money? Investigating Corinna Kopf
The honest answer is the one most fans do not want: nobody outside Kopf's accounting team has seen proof either way. She has never published a wallet address, never run a third-party deposit-verification tool the way a few Twitch-era poker streamers used to, and never let a regulator audit her Stake account on camera. That is not, by itself, evidence of a fake balance — most Kick gamblers operate the same way — but it does mean every "she's risking her own money" claim on her behalf is a guess, not a fact.
The strongest named accusation against her is still Pokimane's. On 22 September 2022, in a Twitch stream clipped and transcribed by Dexerto the same day, she said directly: "She is promoting illegal crypto schemes to a US audience that cannot legally deposit on the .com site she is sending them to." The accusation is not that Kopf's bankroll is fake; it is that the funnel is. Kopf's reply, posted to X the next morning, was that "people are too soft" — not a denial of the funnel, just a dismissal of the criticism.
The complaints sweep against her sponsor matters more than the streamer-on-streamer drama. Stake has been named publicly in a chain of withdrawal cancellations and slot-clone disputes through 2024 and 2025, and Ed Craven personally surfaced in a 2025 case where he was accused of encouraging a self-identified addict to keep depositing. None of those events are Kopf's doing, and she has not been named in any of them — but they are the documented record of the brand whose retainer she draws. Stake operates under Curaçao master licence 8048/JAZ (sub-licence #1668/JAZ for the .com property); it is not licensed by the AGCO in Ontario, by Alberta's new iGaming regulator opening on 13 July 2026, or by any provincial lottery corporation, which is why the .com URL is not legally clickable from a Canadian residential IP. Several of the shell brands Stake has historically deposited cashback through sit on our blacklisted casinos list; Stake itself is not on that list at the time of writing, but the proximity is part of the picture.
Two facts taken together do most of the work in this section. First, Kopf has been on the Stake retainer continuously since the September 2022 Kick migration. Second, she has never produced an independent receipt of a single losing session that drained her own account rather than the sponsor's float — no on-chain wallet, no withdrawal screenshot, no third-party deposit verification on camera. The closest she has come is the bet ladder visible on stream: real-money slot spins generally sit between US$5 and US$25 per click, with bonus buys topping out around US$100, which is one to two orders of magnitude below the bet sizes a fully self-funded high-roller would need to hit the on-camera win amounts she has posted. Until one of those data points changes, the most defensible label for her gambling output is "paid promoter on a sponsor float", not "addict-funded" and not "scammer". The Verdict section below justifies that wording in 2-4 sentences.
What Corinna Plays: Slot Lineup & Provider Mix
Kopf's slot shelf is shorter than the average Kick gambler's and very heavily weighted toward Pragmatic Play. The recurring openers across her Kick VODs in 2024 and 2025 are:
- Sweet Bonanza — Pragmatic Play, the single most-loaded title on her chair-warm-up streams.
- Sugar Rush 1000 — Pragmatic Play, the high-variance follow-up she opens whenever Sweet Bonanza fails to drop a bonus.
- Gates of Olympus — Pragmatic Play, used as the table-game break filler.
- Wanted Dead or a Wild — Hacksaw Gaming, the only non-Pragmatic title that consistently shows up in her hunts.
- Le Bandit — Hacksaw Gaming, requested by chat as the "one-in-100,000 max-win" bonus-buy demo.
- The Dog House — Pragmatic Play, the comedic palate-cleanser after a long losing run.
The shelf is informative on its own. There is almost nothing from NoLimit City on her stream; she has said on camera she finds Mental and San Quentin xWays "stressful" and rarely opens them. She also mostly avoids the high-stake bonus-buy slots that define the Roshtein and Trainwrecks tier, preferring base-game spins at US$5–$25 and occasional US$100 bonus buys when chat insists. That bet ladder is the single biggest reason her on-stream session swings stay in five-figure territory rather than the seven-figure Trainwrecks bracket.
The Pragmatic-heavy mix is also why Bizzo Casino is the deterministic second card above. Bizzo carries the full Pragmatic catalogue including the new Sweet Bonanza 1000 and Sugar Rush 1000 builds Kopf has rotated through on her last few Kick streams, plus the Hacksaw shelf for the rare Wanted Dead or a Wild bonus hunt. The shared library is the reason chat regulars routinely post Bizzo screenshots when asked where to play the same titles she opens; the licensing situation, covered in the Real Money section, is the reason it matters.
Top Corinna Wins, In Order of How Believable They Look
Stake table-games session with Aircool — about US$32,000 (May 2024)
The clearest documented win on Kopf's record is the Stake blackjack session she ran with Aircool that closed roughly US$32,000 up. The clip exists on YouTube as "Aircool and Corinna win $32,000 gambling on stream" — a re-upload of the original Kick VOD — and shows the closing balance counter on Stake's table interface, which is a far harder thing to fake than a slot bonus. Bet sizes through the session ranged from US$50 hands at the start to US$500 hands once they were ahead.
Stake blackjack reel — US$5,000 single hand (March 2024)
The cleanest single-hand documented win is a US$5,000 blackjack pull Kopf posted to her own Instagram on 1 March 2024 with the caption "corinna kopf wins $5,000 in blackjack #stake". The reel shows the dealer's bust card and the chip stack settling, and her own account is the source — which is the highest tier of evidence available short of an on-chain wallet. The bet was US$5,000 even, the payout 3:2 on a natural 21, and the Stake balance line is visible in the corner.
Stake bonus-hunt opener — late 2024 session
The third entry is included for honesty rather than because the receipt is strong. In several Kick VODs across October-December 2024 Kopf opened bonus hunts at US$2,500-$5,000 buy-in scale and closed up at four-figure profits, but the closing balance was not always visible to camera and no third-party clip currently exists on a major archive. We list it for context, not as a verified record. If you find a clip with the closing balance counter visible, the next revision will move it up.
What is missing from the highlight reel
It is worth naming the gap. Kopf has no documented seven-figure single-spin win, no max-win Le Bandit, no Drac's Stacks-style historical record, no Crazy Time x10,000 segment to her name. The biggest verified payout on record is the US$32,000 Aircool blackjack session above. Compared with the Roshtein and Trainwrecks tier, that is a bet ladder and a session size that fits a paid promoter on a sponsor float — exactly the picture the rest of this page paints — and not the bankroll of a self-funded high-roller chasing one-in-100,000 max-win features.
Bottom Line on Corinna Kopf
Kopf is the cleanest example on the current Kick roster of a streamer whose gambling output is a marketing channel, not a hobby. The Stake retainer is real, the slot shelf is consistent, the audience is younger and more female than the average gambling stream, and the documented wins are real but small. There is no proof of a fake balance, but there is also no proof she ever loses her own money — and after three years on the same retainer, the absence of a single named "Corinna lost her own savings tonight" stream is, in its own way, evidence.
For a Canadian viewer the practical layer is short. Stake's .com domain does not hold an Ontario AGCO licence, will not hold one when Alberta's regulated iGaming market opens on 13 July 2026, and is not registered with any provincial lottery corporation (no BCLC, no Loto-Québec, no PlayNow tie-in). Watching Kopf play on it is legal; depositing on it from a Canadian residential IP routes you to the same unregulated funnel Pokimane flagged in 2022, with the same Curaçao recourse path if a withdrawal stalls — which, on the AskGamblers and Trustpilot record for Stake's .com domain, is a recourse path that has worked for some VIP-tier players and stalled for months for others. The provincial-licensed alternative gives you the same Pragmatic catalogue, the same Hacksaw shelf and the same Sweet Bonanza variance without the licensing question, and that is the lane the Favourite Casinos table above is built around.
None of that is a reason to stop watching her. It is a reason to remember that the screen you are watching is a marketing surface paid for by the brand whose logo is on the chip stack. Treat the entertainment as entertainment and the casino link in her bio as an ad; the Canadian-licensed lane is one tab away.
Verdict
Paid promoter. Corinna Kopf gambles on a Stake bankroll she is paid to display, on a platform her sponsor co-owns, with documented wins (Aircool $32K, March 2024 $5K blackjack reel) that match the bet ladder of a mid-bracket retainer rather than a high-roller's own savings. There is no public evidence of a fake balance and no public evidence of a real one — only the contract. If you are matching her bet sizes from your own bankroll on a casino her sponsor pays her to advertise, you are not playing the same game she is.
FAQ about Corinna Kopf
Her real name is Corinna Kopf. She was born on 1 December 1995 in Palatine, Illinois, and now lives in Los Angeles, California.
Around US$20 million on the public record. The bulk came from OnlyFans (about US$67 million across the first three years of the account, by her own count to Yahoo and Outkick in October 2024), with the rest from her Kick gambling retainer with Stake and various brand deals.
Honest answer: nobody outside her accounting team has seen proof either way. She has never published a wallet address, posted a deposit screenshot or run any third-party verification. She has been on a continuous Stake retainer since the September 2022 Kick migration, so the most defensible label is paid promoter on a sponsor float, not addict-funded and not scammer.
Stake. It is the only casino she names on stream and the only affiliate path her Kick channel routes clicks through. The Stake/Kick co-ownership (Ed Craven and Bijan Tehrani built both businesses) means her gambling streams sit inside the same first-party promotional grid as Trainwreckstv and the rest of the Stake-Kick roster.
After a December 2019 Twitch suspension over a Chanel tank top that the platform classed as undergarments, she signed an exclusive Facebook Gaming deal in late 2019. When Twitch tightened its crypto-casino rules on 20 September 2022, the rest of the gambling-streamer roster moved to Kick and she went with them, where the Stake retainer made the move worth it.
No. Stake's .com domain runs on a Curaçao master licence (8048/JAZ, sub-licence 1668/JAZ). It does not hold an Ontario AGCO licence, will not hold one when Alberta's regulated iGaming market opens on 13 July 2026, and is not registered with any provincial lottery corporation. Watching her play is legal; depositing from a Canadian residential IP routes you to an unregulated funnel.
About US$32,000 from a Stake blackjack session with Aircool, archived on YouTube as "Aircool and Corinna win $32,000 gambling on stream". The cleanest single-hand receipt is a US$5,000 blackjack pull she posted to her own Instagram on 1 March 2024. She has no documented seven-figure single-spin win on tape.
resourceful
the whole internet works like this
From a professional point of view, such manipulation of the audience is pure sociopathy. Using the trust of fans for profit, knowing that many will lose their last - this is a diagnosis.
she's a good chick, don't be jealous
Do you know how many teenagers got hooked on gambling because of these "streamers"?