Trainwreckstv Wins $50 Million in a Stake Slot — a Record Not Everyone Believed
Trainwreckstv has once again done exactly what Stake has built an entire casino-streaming ecosystem around: landed a number people cannot just scroll past. This was a $50 million max win in the slot Coins and Cauldrons, a Meta Gaming slot launched through Stake Engine. According to VegasSlotsOnline, the streamer bought the Mystery Bonus for $500,000, and the win became the largest recorded hit in online slot history.
On paper, it is the perfect marketing moment. There is a major streamer, an exclusive tie-in with Stake, a custom slot, a massive number, and a clip that practically spreads itself across social media. But that is exactly the problem: the bigger the amount, the less the audience sees it as an ordinary win.
$50,000,000.00 MAX WIN ON STAKE!
— Stake.com (@Stake) June 7, 2026
A new world record @Trainwreckstv pic.twitter.com/sy1W0c9ugP
After Stake’s post on X, the comments quickly turned not into congratulations but into a kind of firestorm the brand knows well. Users started talking again about it being “staged,” brought up older scandals, and began questioning how fair the situation can even look when the face of a casino wins a record-breaking amount in a game tied to that same casino’s infrastructure. Stake itself posted about the $50,000,000 max win and called it a new world record.
Another layer of irony is the endless race between Trainwreckstv and Roshtein. Roshtein’s previous major record was estimated at around $45.4 million, and before that Trainwreckstv had already grabbed attention with a win of about $37.5 million. VegasSlotsOnline puts it bluntly: records in this space do not live long, because there is too much money, rivalry, and motivation to manufacture viral moments.
That is why the joke about a Polymarket market asking “how long until Roshtein beats Trainwreckstv’s record” landed right on the nerve. For part of the audience, these wins no longer look like rare luck, but like a separate content genre: a huge hit, a wild reaction, clips, an argument over whether the money is “real,” then an even bigger hit.
The only question is how much this kind of hype now actually helps Stake. On one hand, $50 million is free advertising no ordinary banner could ever buy. On the other, every record like this shines an even brighter light on the central conflict in casino streaming: viewers are asked to believe in the emotions and the risk, but there are too many commercial ties, closed terms, and suspicions around it.

From a marketing standpoint, Stake clearly nailed it — everyone is talking. But reputationally, it is a double-edged sword, because the comments there are not really about being happy for Train.
I would not be surprised if Roshtein “accidentally” hits $55 million next week. It is like they are competing over who can fuel the distrust harder.
A $500k bonus buy is not a game for people anymore; it is a separate circus for clips. An ordinary player cannot even imagine putting themselves in that spot.
The amount is beautiful, no argument there. But when a casino ambassador wins in that same casino’s slot, taking it at face value is not exactly easy.