Who Is Yassuo? Net Worth, Stake Contract, Top Slots, and the Truth Behind the Big Wins
Who Is Yassuo? Quick Profile, Net Worth & Casino Habits
| Feature / Fact | Details |
|---|---|
| Real Name | Mohamed "Moe" Abdalrhman |
| Nickname | Yassuo (sometimes Moe) |
| Year / Country of Birth | 1998, United States |
| Based In | California, US |
| Streaming Since | 2017 on Twitch (League of Legends), gambling content from 2020 |
| Main Platform(s) | Twitch (primary), Kick (announced July 2023, non-exclusive), YouTube |
| Estimated Net Worth (2026) | ~$3M – $5M (esports salary, Twitch sub revenue, YouTube AdSense, gambling affiliate income) |
| Known For | Yasuo one-trick LoL stream, 100 Thieves content creator since 22 August 2019, Stake-sponsored slot sessions, public addiction confession |
| Favourite Casinos | Stake, BetLabel |
| Documented Max Wins | Moon Princess $499,974 (4,166x), Wanted Dead or a Wild ~$480,000, Juicy Fruits $415,744 (3,464x), RIP City $312,500 (12,500x) |
| Owned Properties / Side Businesses | Long-time 100 Thieves creator partnership; Twitch and Kick channels; YouTube secondary channels (YassuoClips, Alt Degeneracy) |
| Known Controversies | June 2021 r/LivestreamFail clip (post o8xh1q) showing fans had wagered an estimated $14.87M via his Stake referral code; March 2023 TikTok confession that he was struggling with gambling and vape addictions; YouTube channel temporarily removed in 2023 |
Yassuo's audience profile is exactly why this article exists. League of Legends viewers skew young, and 100 Thieves' merch-driven branding pulls in even more teenagers. When the same creator pulls a $499,974 spin on Moon Princess on stream, those viewers do not see a salaried gambling pro on a sponsor's bankroll. They see a "lucky guy from LoL" — and the pivot from gaming content to slot sessions has consequences a lottery-style "max win" clip never explains.
How Yassuo Built His Bankroll: From 100 Thieves to Stake Slot Hunts
Public net-worth tracking sites put Yassuo somewhere in the $3M–$5M range in 2026. That figure is not a casino bankroll. It is the cumulative result of three stacked income streams: his 100 Thieves content-creator deal (signed 22 August 2019 and still listed on the org's roster), Twitch subscription and bit revenue from the LoL years when he routinely sat at 25,000+ concurrent viewers, and YouTube AdSense across his main and gambling-focused secondary channels.
The fourth stream is the one this article is about: Stake referral and sponsorship money. The 2020–2022 stretch was where slot streams started showing up next to League ranked games on his schedule. The model is the standard crypto-casino creator deal — a flat per-stream fee, plus a percentage of net house revenue from anyone who signs up on his code. That model is precisely what Twitch's October 2022 unlicensed-gambling policy was written to push out, and it is the model his June 2021 referral-code reveal made impossible to deny.
By 2024 the gambling cadence had collapsed. Streamscharts records his last Twitch broadcast on 7 July 2024, and his Kick channel (announced via Reddit in July 2023, post 14w14fw on r/LivestreamFail) has dropped to occasional slot recordings rather than the seven-day-a-week schedule of his peak. The bankroll that built the net worth is mostly historic income, not active grinding. That matters when readers ask whether the casino sessions you can still find on his archive are real bets — for several years they were, but a lot of that money came back through deposit-percentage payouts rather than straight wins.
One detail readers often miss: the headline figures on streamer net-worth aggregators almost never include the affiliate revenue line, because affiliate payouts are private settlements between the streamer and the operator. The aggregator picks up Twitch sub counts, public 100 Thieves contract leaks, and a guess at YouTube AdSense — and stops there. So when you see a "$3M" or "$5M" estimate next to Yassuo's name, that estimate is the floor of his lifetime earnings, not the ceiling. The June 2021 referral-code reveal showed exactly the line item the aggregators are missing.
Where Yassuo Actually Plays: His Go-To Casinos
Two casinos define his on-screen rotation. Stake is the publicly-disclosed sponsor whose referral code surfaced in the June 2021 Reddit reveal and which appears in every Pragmatic and Hacksaw clip on his secondary channel. BetLabel is the same-shelf operator his Discord regulars keep naming when they ask where to play the Juicy Fruits / Moon Princess / RIP City rotation without the geo-block routing Stake imposes on Canadian sign-ups.
Stake is his Stake.com partner: per-stream fee, referral-code revenue share, the structure his peers on the Kick slot slate also run on.
BetLabel carries the same Pragmatic and Hacksaw catalogue and processes Interac e-Transfer, which is why his viewers keep raising it as the Canada-friendly equivalent.
Inside Yassuo's Stake Contract
The contract itself has never been published in full. What is on record is the model: Stake's creator deals pay a flat amount per slot stream (six figures monthly for the top tier of slot streamers, less for mid-size creators in Yassuo's bracket) plus a revenue share on every dollar of net house win generated by users who sign up through the streamer's referral code. The June 2021 clip on r/LivestreamFail — post o8xh1q on the subreddit — is the closest thing the public has to a leaked statement of size: viewers paused the screen and tallied 22 visible referral entries to a running total of $5,954,062.50, with the post's top comments estimating ~$14,874,120.16 once Yassuo scrolled to the rest of the list.
That total is not Yassuo's pay. It is the wager volume he funnelled in. The percentage Stake hands back to a creator on referral wager varies by tier and by jurisdiction, but on a $14.87M wager number even a low-single-digit revenue share lands in six figures of his pocket. That is the income line the existing public conversation about him keeps circling — not the size of any single big-win clip.
His earlier Roobet content from the same window operated on the same affiliate-funnel logic, and the Roobet sign-up clips are still on YouTube today even though the active Stake partnership eventually displaced them. Twitch's 20 September 2022 announcement of the unlicensed-gambling ban (effective 18 October 2022) ended that arrangement on the bigger platform, which is exactly why the July 2023 Kick announcement matters: Kick is the only mainstream destination where the Stake referral code can still appear on overlay without a policy violation. The structural similarities to other esports-adjacent sponsor brands are detailed in this esports sponsor explainer if you want to see the full pattern.
What is unusual about Yassuo's contract — at least compared to the Trainwreck and xQc tier — is the size. He is not on a per-stream fee in the hundreds of thousands. The mid-bracket creator deals run in the low five figures monthly plus the affiliate share, and his streaming hours during the Stake window match that bracket rather than the heavy daily grind of a full-time slot streamer. The implication: a much larger fraction of his gambling-related income came from referral-share rather than the appearance fee. That matters for the audience question — a referral-share model has every incentive to keep new sign-ups arriving, which is why the June 2021 dashboard moment landed as hard as it did with viewers who realised what they were looking at.
Real Money or House Money? Investigating Yassuo
This is the question every Canadian viewer who lands on his clips asks. The honest answer is that Yassuo's gambling streams have a layered bankroll: some of the money on screen is genuinely his (he has admitted to losing his own funds on stream and stopping for breaks for that reason), and some of it is "play money" provided by Stake under the standard sponsor structure. Both are normal in this part of the industry. What is not normal is what each of those layers does to the audience.
The receipts:
- June 2021. Yassuo opened his Stake referral dashboard on stream. Reddit users freeze-framed the visible portion and added it up: $5,954,062.50 across 22 names, with extrapolated totals of approximately $14,874,120.16 once he scrolled. He has never disputed those numbers publicly.
- March 2023, Yassuo's own TikTok. He told the camera that he was "quitting vaping and gambling" and described both as addictions he was actively fighting. That is a streamer-by-name admission that the activity was not just job content for him.
- 20 September 2022, Twitch policy update. Twitch published its prohibition of unlicensed gambling sites (Stake.com is on that list) with an 18 October 2022 effective date. The Guardian's same-day write-up is the cleanest external timeline. Yassuo's Stake content disappeared from Twitch on schedule and reappeared on Kick the following summer.
- July 2023. Yassuo confirmed his Kick deal was non-exclusive. That is the structural marker of a "rebooted on a smaller platform" creator rather than a clean exit from gambling.
None of those four facts requires guessing. Each one is sourced from a public post, a public policy update, or his own video. They are the entire reason there is a "fake-money question" attached to his name at all — and the same question pattern other casino streamers have been called out for. The longer-running version of that public argument is documented in the AyeZee vs. Roshtein deep-dive, which is the closest analogue on this site to the structural critique Yassuo's audience has been making.
One more piece worth naming. Yassuo's main YouTube channel was temporarily removed in 2023 (covered in the YouTube video "The Reason Why Yassuo's YouTube Channel Is BANNED"). The channel returned, but the removal sat next to the same period in which his addiction confession went up, which is why it gets lumped into the timeline by long-time viewers.
The pattern across all of those receipts is consistent: every time the public conversation about Yassuo's gambling has shifted, it has been triggered by something he himself put on screen — the referral dashboard, the TikTok confession, the Kick announcement. That is the shape of an "addict-funded" streamer rather than a "fake-money" one. He is not a Roshtein-style demo-balance case where the money on the screen has been alleged to be fictitious. He is a creator who lost real money on real bets, kept playing, and kept funnelling sign-ups while doing it. The receipts are receipts of his own behaviour, not of anyone else accusing him.
What Yassuo Plays: Slot Lineup & Provider Mix
His slot shelf is narrower than most full-time gambling streamers. It is dominated by three studios — Pragmatic Play, Play'n GO, and Hacksaw Gaming — with the occasional NoLimit City detour. The pattern matches the standard Stake creator playlist of 2021–2022, which is when his archive of big-win clips was built.
Most-streamed titles, with provider attribution verified against the on-site catalogue:
- Juicy Fruits (Pragmatic Play) — the slot behind the $415,744 (3,464x) clip on his main channel.
- Moon Princess (Play'n GO) — the slot behind the $499,974 (4,166x) clip, his single highest documented payout.
- RIP City (Hacksaw Gaming) — the slot behind the $312,500 (12,500x) max-win clip.
- Wanted Dead or a Wild (Hacksaw Gaming) — the high-volatility staple that produced his ~$480,000 hit cited by VegasSlotsOnline's streamer profile.
- Sugar Rush 1000 (Pragmatic Play) — the cluster-pays follow-up he picked up once Pragmatic released the upgraded version, used in the back half of his bonus-hunt sessions.
- Le Fisherman (Hacksaw Gaming) — the lower-bet warm-up he uses to test the table before pivoting to bigger bets, often featured at the start of his Kick recordings.
The bonus-buy mechanic shows up in roughly half of the session VODs, which is why Pragmatic and Hacksaw dominate — both studios sell a feature buy on the titles he prefers, which lets him compress a one-hour bonus hunt into 25 minutes of stream. That format is also better content for a streamer with a non-gambling-native audience: a 100x base game grind does not retain LoL viewers, but a $250 bonus-buy with the feature animation popping every 90 seconds does.
What the shelf does not include is anything from the live casino side. There is no Crazy Time, no live blackjack grind, no roulette table. That is consistent with the Stake creator playlist of his window — slot output sells better in a YouTube clip economy where a 30-second max-win hit gets ten times the views of a 12-minute live-game session. It also keeps the content tightly inside the studios where the platform's revenue share is the deepest, which is the structural reason every Stake-tier slot streamer ends up gravitating to the same six or seven titles regardless of which creator you are watching.
Yassuo Biggest Win & Craziest Casino Stream Highlights
Four clips define his big-win archive. All four are on his own YouTube channel and have been embedded on this page from the streamer's official upload — they are not re-uploads.
Moon Princess (Play'n GO) — $499,974 (4,166x), uploaded January 2021
His single largest documented payout. The session ended with the Princess feature replacing the lowest-paying symbols with the highest-paying ones on the final spin of a re-trigger, which is what produced the 4,166x multiplier on a $120 bet. Verified via his own YouTube channel.
Juicy Fruits (Pragmatic Play) — $415,744 (3,464x), uploaded 2021
Filmed during the same Stake-sponsored window as the Moon Princess hit. The bonus collected enough scatter symbols to expand the central wild to its full grid coverage, which is the only realistic path to a four-figure multiplier on this title.
RIP City (Hacksaw Gaming) — $312,500 (12,500x), first-spin max win
The highest multiplier on his archive. Three wilds landed on the opening spin, one of them carrying a 200x on-symbol multiplier, and the resulting paylines stacked to the published max-win cap. Uploaded to his channel as "MAXWIN ON RIP CITY - FIRST SPIN."
Wanted Dead or a Wild (Hacksaw Gaming) — ~$480,000, 2021–2022 stretch
VegasSlotsOnline's streamer profile lists this hit at approximately $480,000 during his 2021–2022 Stake-sponsored stretch. The original VOD is no longer pinned on his main channel and the upload date is not stamped on the public clip aggregators, so this entry is included as a text reference rather than an embed until the source clip surfaces.
So, Should You Watch Yassuo? Honest Conclusion
Yassuo is one of the cleanest case studies of how an esports streamer becomes a casino streamer without ever announcing the change. He kept the LoL audience, kept the 100 Thieves badge, kept the same friendly delivery, and added a Stake overlay. The audience did not get a warning label. The June 2021 referral-code reveal told us in numbers what nobody had been willing to put on screen before — that on the streamer side, the conversion funnel is enormous, and on the viewer side, the consequences land on people who never signed up to be the product.
For Canadian viewers specifically, the structural problem is sharper. Stake does not hold an Ontario AGCO licence for the regulated iGaming market, which means Ontarians signing up through the referral code are using the .com offshore product rather than the locally-regulated one. Alberta's regulated market opens 13 July 2026 with the same operator-by-operator licensing logic; until then, players outside Ontario are routing through provincial lottery corporations or the same offshore operators Yassuo's stream points at. This is the exact youth-audience dynamic the Ontario regulator has been forced to address — covered in our Ontario youth-gambling report. Watching Yassuo's clips for the LoL content is fine. Treating his slot sessions as a model for your own bankroll is the line nobody on stream is going to draw for you.
If you want a cleaner same-shelf experience without the offshore routing, the casino reviews hub ranks the operators that actually licence the Pragmatic and Hacksaw catalogue he plays. And if you want to see the broader pattern of esports-creator-turned-casino-promoter, the parallel case is documented next.
Verdict
Verdict: addict-funded. Yassuo has personally admitted that gambling was an addiction he was fighting, while a year and a half earlier he showed an estimated $14.87M in fan wagers running through his single Stake referral code. Both things are on the public record from his own mouth and his own screen. The slot sessions are real bets layered on a sponsor bankroll, the wins are real, and so is the harm to the part of his audience too young to read the fine print. If you are matching his bet sizes on your own balance, you are not playing the same game he is — he has a per-stream fee and a deposit-percentage payout cushioning every spin, and you do not.
FAQ about Yassuo
Yassuo is Mohamed "Moe" Abdalrhman, born in 1998 and based in California, US. He picked up the handle from the League of Legends champion Yasuo and built his audience as a one-trick mid-laner before pivoting to gambling content.
Public estimates place him in the $3M–$5M range. That figure stacks his 100 Thieves content-creator deal (signed 22 August 2019), Twitch sub revenue from his League of Legends peak, YouTube AdSense, and the Stake referral and sponsorship income that aggregators almost never include.
Both. He is on the standard Stake creator structure that mixes a per-stream fee with a referral revenue share, and he has admitted on his own TikTok in March 2023 to losing real money during the Stake-funded years and fighting a gambling addiction. The label that fits the receipts is "addict-funded" rather than "fake-money."
Stake is the publicly-disclosed sponsor whose referral code surfaced in the June 2021 r/LivestreamFail dashboard reveal and which appears on every Pragmatic Play and Hacksaw Gaming clip on his secondary channel. Roobet covered an earlier window of the same affiliate-funnel model.
He did not leave Twitch under a ban. Twitch published its prohibition of unlicensed gambling sites on 20 September 2022 with effect from 18 October 2022; Stake.com is on that list. Yassuo announced a non-exclusive Kick deal in July 2023 (r/LivestreamFail post 14w14fw), which is the only mainstream platform where the Stake referral overlay can still appear without policy violation.
Stake is not licensed by the Ontario AGCO and is not part of the regulated Ontario iGaming market, so Ontario players signing up via his referral code are using the offshore .com product. Alberta's regulated market opens 13 July 2026 with the same operator-by-operator licensing logic. Players in other provinces are routing through provincial lottery corporations or the same offshore operators his stream points at.
$499,974 on Moon Princess (Play'n GO) at a 4,166x multiplier, captured on his own YouTube channel. Other notable hits: Juicy Fruits $415,744 (3,464x, Pragmatic Play), RIP City $312,500 first-spin max win at 12,500x (Hacksaw Gaming), and ~$480,000 on Wanted Dead or a Wild (Hacksaw Gaming) per VegasSlotsOnline's profile.
I'm so fed up with these casino streamers... I fell for their bait a year ago and spent all my savings on Stake. I thought I'd make some easy money too.
Where is the proof? Show screenshots of the contracts with the casino
Be careful guys, it's all fake!
Come on, everyone already knows it's fake. Who in their right mind would believe in these "random" $500k wins?
Would you refuse that kind of money?