Who Is DeuceAce? Net Worth, Stake Contract, Top Slots, and the Truth Behind the Big Wins
DeuceAce Snapshot: Real Name, Money, Platforms & Sponsors
| Feature / Fact | Details |
|---|---|
| Real Name | Not publicly disclosed; he streams under the single screen name on every channel he runs and has never released a face-cam reveal or full-name interview |
| Nickname | DeuceAce (also written Deuce Ace; YouTube channel DeuceAce, formerly active on Twitch before the September 2022 crypto-casino crackdown) |
| Streaming Since | 2019 on Twitch as a slot-focused channel; full-time on Kick after Twitch's 20 September 2022 ban on advertisements for unlicensed crypto casinos |
| Main Platforms | Kick (the only platform that carries his slot sessions in 2026), YouTube (clip archive), X / Twitter, Telegram |
| Estimated Net Worth (2026) | Not publicly disclosed; he is not in the Roshtein or xQc bracket and the most defensible read places him in the low-to-mid seven figures, almost entirely from his Stake retainer plus affiliate revenue-share from referred deposits at SpinsBro, SlotWolf and Touch Casino |
| Known For | NoLimit City–heavy bonus hunts; the El Paso Gunfight x2,030 €81,216 clip; the Rosh Immortality Cube x3,178 €254,000 hit; the Fire in the Hole xBomb x54,465 multi-million payout that still trends on weekly highlight reels; on-air rotation with Roshtein, Frankdimes and VonDicetv |
| Favourite Casinos | Stake, Casinochan |
| Documented Max Wins | Fire in the Hole xBomb — x54,465 multiplier (NoLimit City, on-stream YouTube clip); Rosh Immortality Cube — €254,000 at x3,178 (4ThePlayer); El Paso Gunfight — €81,216 at x2,030 (NoLimit City). No documented seven-figure single-spin win that survives a third-party check |
| Side Businesses | Affiliate funnel routed through his own referral codes at Stake, SpinsBro, SlotWolf and Touch Casino; Telegram VIP channel for clip drops. No casino brand of his own and no documented merchandise line |
| Known Controversies | Public on-stream rotation with Roshtein, Frankdimes and VonDicetv — three names already on this site's blacklist of fake-balance broadcasters; viewer reports going back to 2020 that he bans chatters who ask about deposit screenshots (the "How A Fake Money Slots Streamer Responds To Being Asked About Deposits" YouTube clip below documents one such ban on camera); promoted partner casinos (CosmicSlot, SlotWolf, Touch Casino, SpinsBro) flagged by this site's RTP audit team for cut RTP on flagship Pragmatic Play and Play'n GO titles |
Inside DeuceAce's Bankroll: NoLimit City Wins, Stake Affiliate Code & Low-RTP Funnel
DeuceAce is a mid-bracket name, not a headline one. He has never announced a platform deal, never posted a per-stream rate, and never produced a wallet address or KYC receipt. Every net-worth figure circulating on fan forums is a guess, and most of those guesses scale off the size of the chip stack on screen rather than the size of the cheque that funds it. The most defensible read of his finances stacks three lines.
The first line is Kick streaming income. After the September 2022 Twitch ban on advertising unlicensed crypto casinos, Kick absorbed effectively the entire slot-streaming class, and the Trainwrecks profile that doubles as a tour of the Kick rate card still describes the variable-rate pool that mid-tier streamers like DeuceAce sit inside. His channel size — high five-figure follower count on Kick, four-figure average viewers, multi-hour daily sessions — puts him squarely in that mid-tier bracket, not the headliner one.
The second line is the Stake retainer. The affiliate code under his chat points at Stake. Stake-branded chrome owns the overlay on every recent slot session. Stake is the only crypto-casino brand that appears as a primary sponsor on his Kick page. The Trainwrecks bracket is six figures per stream; the mid-bracket flat-fee tier the rest of the roster occupies is high five figures per month for a streamer with DeuceAce's hours and reach. He has never claimed the Trainwrecks bracket, so the mid-bracket read is the honest one.
The third line, and probably the largest single one, is the affiliate revenue-share on every viewer who clicks through one of his casino codes and deposits. That is the part of streamer income most viewers never see. The Forbes reporting on Ed Craven and Bijan Tehrani — the same Australian founders who own both Stake and Kick — laid out how those revenue funnels feed each other; mid-bracket streamers like DeuceAce are the workhorses of that affiliate pipe.
Two facts make his pipe noisier than most. First, his funnel is not Stake-only. He has actively pushed deposits at SpinsBro, SlotWolf, Touch Casino and (until recently) CosmicSlot, all four of which this site's RTP audit team has flagged for cut RTP on flagship Pragmatic Play and Play'n GO titles, and one of which — CosmicSlot — is now on the blacklisted list for that same reason. Second, every casino in that funnel routes its CPA through the same kind of referral dashboard our explainer on privileged streamer accounts walks through, so the revenue line scales with viewer losses, not viewer wins.
Add the three lines together and the realistic picture is a streamer earning low-to-mid seven figures a year, almost all of it sponsor and affiliate revenue, very little of it from any independent business. There is no DeuceAce-branded casino, no namesake slot, no merch line. The stream is the marketing channel and the marketing channel is the entire stack.
DeuceAce's Casino Lineup: Sponsor + Regular Spots
DeuceAce's rotation is short and very Stake-shaped. Stake is the only casino he names in his on-stream banner art, the only one that carries his primary affiliate code, and the only one his Discord regulars cite when asked which account he is actually playing on.
Casinochan is the second card because it carries the same NoLimit City, Hacksaw Gaming and Pragmatic Play shelf his on-camera bonus hunts depend on (Fire in the Hole xBomb, El Paso Gunfight, Sweet Bonanza), accepts Canadian-dollar deposits via Interac e-Transfer without the crypto-only friction of the .com sponsor, and is not on the blacklisted list flagged in the Net Worth section above.
How the Stake Sponsorship Actually Works for DeuceAce
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; our reporting at the time tracked the migration in real time. DeuceAce — already established on Twitch from 2019 — slid straight into the Kick rotation that Stake bankrolls. The platform shares founders with the casino, which is why the same revenue funnels through both businesses, and why no Stake-sponsored streamer in his tier has ever posted a deal with a competing crypto casino while still on Kick's first-party promo grid.
His content cadence inside that contract is the cadence of a mid-bracket retainer. Roshtein streams six to seven days a week and frames every session as a casino broadcast; DeuceAce typically goes live four to six times a week, almost always on slots, with a Stake banner on the overlay and the affiliate code under the chat. Bet sizes on tape range from €1 base spins on his slow-paced Rosh Immortality Cube grinds up to €100-plus bonus buys on his more aggressive Fire in the Hole xBomb sessions. That ladder is the single biggest tell that he is operating on a sponsor float rather than a high-roller's own bankroll — the swings do not reach the seven-figure single-spin scale Roshtein posts, but the volume is high enough that the affiliate flow more than covers a normal streaming window.
Where the picture gets dirtier than Frank Dimes' or Trainwrecks' is the secondary funnel. DeuceAce's website and pinned social posts have, at various points across the past three years, sent viewers to SpinsBro, SlotWolf, Touch Casino and CosmicSlot. This site's RTP audit team measured the Pragmatic Play and Play'n GO theoretical-return curves on those four operators and found systematic cuts versus the reference RTP set by the studios. Touch Casino was flagged for Sweet Bonanza and Big Bass Bonanza specifically; CosmicSlot was flagged across the Play'n GO and Pragmatic shelves and is now on the blacklisted list for it. DeuceAce has never publicly addressed any of those audit findings.
What DeuceAce gets in return for that funnel is harder to pin down to the dollar. He has never disclosed a per-stream rate, never named a flat retainer, and never clarified whether the on-stream balance is topped up by a sponsor float. The honest read, based on the on-camera bet ladder and the tier of streamer he sits in, is a high five-figure monthly Stake retainer plus revenue-share on every funnel-casino click — meaningful money, but an order of magnitude below the figures attached to the Roshtein and xQc names.
The relationship sits inside a sponsor that has not had a quiet two years. Stake has been named publicly in a 2026 wave of cancelled-winning-bet complaints and a March 2026 case where co-founder Ed Craven was accused of personally encouraging a self-identified addict to keep depositing. DeuceAce has not publicly addressed either story.
Is DeuceAce's Bankroll Real? What the Receipts Show
The honest answer to the most-asked question — does DeuceAce gamble with his own money? — is the one most fans do not want: nobody outside his accounting team has seen proof either way. He has never published a wallet address, never run a third-party deposit-verification tool on camera, and never let a regulator audit his Stake account. That is not, by itself, evidence of a fake balance — most Kick gamblers operate the same way — but it does mean every "he is risking his own money" claim on his behalf is a guess, not a fact.
The named accusations against him are older and structural. The original casinosincanada.com DeuceAce file, first published in 2023 and signed by this newsroom, called him out by name as "another pawn in the hands of the gambling industry", citing his on-stream rotation with Roshtein, Frankdimes and VonDicetv — three streamers on this site's blacklist of fake-balance broadcasters. That accusation has not been retracted. It is also not unique to DeuceAce; the Xposed analysis lays out the wider sponsored-balance template his on-stream output fits inside, and the AyeZee vs. Roshtein file documents the public feud that put the entire fake-balance debate on the public record.
One named on-camera incident does most of the work in this section. The YouTube clip below — published under the title How A Fake Money Slots Streamer Responds To Being Asked About Deposits — captures a viewer asking DeuceAce mid-stream whether he has ever shown a deposit on screen. DeuceAce instantly bans the chatter, jokes about it, and moves on. To this day, no public clip exists of him pushing a deposit through cashier on camera or producing a withdrawal screenshot. That is not legally a fake-balance confession; it is, however, the single most-cited piece of evidence in every DeuceAce thread that asks the same question for the same reason.
The complaints sweep against his sponsor matters more than the streamer-on-streamer drama. 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 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. The 2026 reporting on Stake's manipulation of stream-time game results is the documented record of the brand whose retainer he draws. None of those events are DeuceAce's doing, and he has not been named in any of them — but they are the company he keeps on screen.
Two facts taken together do most of the work in this section. First, DeuceAce has been on the Stake retainer continuously since the Kick migration in late 2022, with the same on-stream affiliate code and the same secondary funnel pointing at low-RTP partner brands. Second, he has never produced an independent receipt of a single losing session that drained his own account rather than the sponsor's float — no on-chain wallet, no withdrawal screenshot, no third-party deposit verification on camera, in more than three years on the same retainer. The closest he has come is the bet ladder visible on stream: real-money slot spins generally sit between €1 and €25 per click, with bonus buys topping out around €100 — one to two orders of magnitude below the bet sizes a fully self-funded mid-bracket high-roller would need to clear the on-camera win amounts he has posted. Until one of those data points changes, the most defensible label for his gambling output is paid promoter on a sponsor float, not addict-funded and not scammer in the strictest sense. The Verdict section below justifies that wording.
DeuceAce's Most-Played Slots, Ranked
DeuceAce's shelf leans hard on one studio above all others: NoLimit City, the Stockholm shop behind Fire in the Hole, San Quentin xWays and Tombstone RIP. He rotates through Pragmatic Play and 4ThePlayer for change-of-pace sessions, but the clip-density that built his channel is almost entirely NoLimit-shaped. He skews to high-variance titles built for max-win moments; slow-paced low-volatility games barely show up.
- Fire in the Hole xBomb (NoLimit City) — the single slot most casual viewers associate with the DeuceAce name. Source of the headline x54,465 multiplier clip below: several Collector symbols stacked into the bottom row of chests during the bonus round and compounded multipliers from the entire grid on every spin.
- El Paso Gunfight (NoLimit City) — source of the €81,216 Mega Big Win clip at x2,030. The bonus buy landed a winning combination connecting the central expanded symbol with two wilds on the very first spin of the round.
- Rosh Immortality Cube (4ThePlayer) — the €254,000 at x3,178 hit. Two Collector symbols dropped during the bonus and harvested multipliers from the whole grid on each spin until the round closed.
- San Quentin xWays (NoLimit City) — recurring fixture in his bonus-hunt rotation, the original chaos-grade bonus buy his community uses as the benchmark for hit-rate volatility.
- Tombstone RIP (NoLimit City) — Wild West cousin of Fire in the Hole, regular opener on his Saturday streams, the slot that produced his second-tier x10,000-plus multiplier clips.
- Fire in the Hole 2 (NoLimit City) — sequel to his signature title, played heavily through 2024–2025 once the original ran out of new content cycles.
- Fire In The Hole 3 (NoLimit City) — current rotation slot for the Fire in the Hole brand on his channel; he was one of the first to cover it on the Kick gambling roster on release.
- Sweet Bonanza (Pragmatic Play) — the chair-warm-up cluster-pay he rotates through between higher-variance NoLimit runs. Same slot his partner casinos were caught cutting RTP on, which is part of why the funnel coverage above matters.
- Bonus-buy slots as a category — most of the slots above are played with bonus buys. That is a deliberate content decision: bonus buys cut the grind and maximise clip density, which is exactly what a stream of his length needs to fill a weekly highlight reel.
The provider mix is also why the Megaways and new-online-slots category hubs are the practical place a Canadian viewer ends up if they want to play the same titles he opens. The shared library is the reason chat regulars routinely post Casinochan screenshots when asked where to spin Fire in the Hole xBomb on a Canadian-dollar account; the licensing situation, covered in the Real Money section above, is the reason it matters.
DeuceAce's Biggest Wins on Camera — and the Ones People Question
Fire in the Hole xBomb — x54,465 multiplier (NoLimit City)
The headline clip on the channel and the slot most casual viewers associate with the DeuceAce name. Several Collector symbols stacked into the bottom row of chests during the bonus round, compounding multipliers from the entire game field on every spin until the round closed at a x54,465 multiplier. The clip below is the on-stream YouTube cut that has been hosted on his page since the original session.
Rosh Immortality Cube — €254,000 at x3,178 (4ThePlayer)
One of the cleanest large-payout clips on his record. Two Collector symbols landed during the bonus round and harvested multipliers from the entire grid on every spin, eventually closing at €254,000 on a base bet that fit the standard mid-bracket Stake-funded ladder. The clip below is the on-stream YouTube cut.
El Paso Gunfight — €81,216 Mega Big Win, x2,030 (NoLimit City)
Bonus-buy clip in NoLimit City's El Paso Gunfight Xnudge. The first spin of the round connected the central expanded symbol with two wild symbols, paying €81,216 on a comparatively modest base stake. Still a frequent insert in weekly Mega Big Win compilations on YouTube three years after the original broadcast.
What is missing from the highlight reel
It is worth naming the gap. DeuceAce has no documented seven-figure single-spin win that survives a third-party check, no Drac's Stacks-style historical record, no Crazy Time x10,000 segment to his name, no on-chain proof of a single losing session that drained a personal bankroll. The biggest verified payout on his record is the Rosh Immortality Cube €254,000 hit above. Compared with the Roshtein and Trainwrecks tier — both of whom have posted seven- and eight-figure single-spin clips with closing balance counters visible — 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-a-million max-win features.
Final Read on DeuceAce: What It All Adds Up To
DeuceAce is one of the cleanest mid-tier examples on the current Kick gambling roster of a streamer whose output is a marketing channel rather than a hobby. The Stake retainer is real, the slot shelf is consistent, the audience is mid-sized but loyal, and the documented wins are real. There is no proof of a literal demo-mode toggle, but there is also no proof he ever loses his own money — and after more than three continuous years on the same retainer, with the same secondary funnel routing viewers at SpinsBro, SlotWolf and Touch Casino, the absence of a single named "DeuceAce lost his 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 AGCO licence in Ontario, 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 him play on it is legal; depositing on it from a Canadian residential IP routes you to the same unregulated crypto-casino segment the rest of the Stake-funded roster occupies, with the same Curaçao recourse path if a withdrawal stalls — a path that has worked for some VIP-tier players and stalled for months for others on the AskGamblers and Trustpilot record. The provincial-licensed alternative gives you the same NoLimit City, Hacksaw Gaming and Pragmatic Play catalogue, the same Fire in the Hole and Sweet Bonanza variance, and the same bonus-buy access without the licensing question — which is the lane the Favourite Casinos table above is built around.
None of that is a reason to stop watching him. It is a reason to remember that the screen you are watching is a marketing surface paid for by the brand whose chip-stack chrome sits at the top of the frame, and that the secondary funnel at the bottom of his channel description points at brands this site has been writing audit-driven warnings about for two years. Treat the entertainment as entertainment and the affiliate codes under the chat as ads; the Canadian-licensed lane is one tab away.
Verdict
Paid promoter. DeuceAce gambles on a Stake bankroll he is paid to display, on a platform his sponsor co-owns, with documented wins (€254,000 on Rosh Immortality Cube, €81,216 on El Paso Gunfight, an x54,465 multiplier on Fire in the Hole xBomb) that fit the bet ladder of a mid-bracket retainer rather than a high-roller's own savings — and a secondary funnel that pushes viewers at SpinsBro, SlotWolf, Touch Casino and (until recently) CosmicSlot, brands this site's RTP audits have flagged for cut returns on flagship slots. There is no public evidence of a literal demo-mode toggle and no public evidence of a real bankroll either — only the contract, the affiliate codes under his chat, the on-camera ban of the viewer who asked about deposits, and three-plus years of unbroken sponsor cadence. If you are matching his bet sizes from your own bankroll on the casinos his codes route to, you are not playing the same game he is.
Currency-context note. Winning amounts in this round-up are quoted in the currency reported by the source streamer or operator (typically EUR, occasionally GBP or USD). CAD-equivalents are not independently calculated; figures should be treated as approximate for Canadian-audience comparison and are subject to FX-rate variation between the time of the streamer's session and the time of reading.
Winning rounds of these magnitudes are statistically rare. Online play in Canada is regulated province by province; in Ontario only iGaming Ontario (iGO)-registered operators are authorised. Players in Ontario must be 19+. Responsible-gambling guide · ConnexOntario 1-866-531-2600.
FAQ about DeuceAce
DeuceAce has never publicly disclosed a full legal name and has never released a face-cam reveal or full-name interview. He streams under the single screen name on every channel he runs. His on-stream language and chat moderation patterns sit inside the Northern-European slot-streamer cohort that built around Roshtein and Frankdimes, but he has never confirmed a country of residence on tape.
He has never published a wealth figure and there is no Forbes-style estimate on the public record. The most defensible read, based on his Kick channel size, his Stake retainer tier, and the affiliate revenue-share on his secondary funnel at SpinsBro, SlotWolf and Touch Casino, places him in the low-to-mid seven figures. He is not in the Roshtein or xQc bracket and has never claimed to be.
Nobody outside his accounting team has seen proof either way. He has never published a wallet address, never run a third-party deposit-verification tool on camera, and never produced a withdrawal screenshot in more than three years on the same Stake retainer. The on-camera ban of a viewer who asked him about deposits, captured in the YouTube clip embedded in the Real Money section, is the single most-cited piece of evidence on the question.
Stake. The affiliate code under his Kick chat points at Stake, the on-stream banner art is Stake-branded, and Stake is the only crypto-casino brand that owns space on his channel chrome. Secondary affiliate codes for SpinsBro, SlotWolf and Touch Casino sit below the primary CTA on his website but they are revenue-share partners, not on-stream sponsors.
The same reason effectively the entire slot-streaming class did: Twitch's 20 September 2022 rule update banning advertisements for unlicensed crypto casinos, which made his sponsorship structure unworkable on the platform. Kick — which shares founders with Stake — absorbed the migration and is the only platform that carries his slot sessions in 2026.
Stake's .com domain does not hold an AGCO licence in Ontario, 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 him play on it is legal; depositing on it from a Canadian residential IP routes you to an unregulated Curaçao-licensed funnel. The provincial-licensed alternative covered in the Favourite Casinos section gives Canadian players the same NoLimit City and Pragmatic Play library on a Canadian-dollar account.
The Rosh Immortality Cube hit at €254,000 (x3,178 multiplier on 4ThePlayer's slot) is the largest verified payout on his record. The El Paso Gunfight x2,030 €81,216 Mega Big Win and the Fire in the Hole xBomb x54,465 multi-million multiplier are the other two clips most frequently cited on his channel. He has no documented seven-figure single-spin win that survives a third-party check.
You’re criticizing as if you’re not doing the same thing xD
Usually, people watch for fun and so it’s not boring to spin alone, like being in company. It seems obvious that streams are a show.
They’re all the same.
I thought he was a real player and just lucky...
Yeah, I watched his games. So what?