I’m reading the comments and honestly can’t believe how many people still believe the fairytale of anonymous crypto in licensed casinos. Guys, come on! This article was written for you. Roobet isn’t some shady underground club — it’s a licensed operator that has to check who’s playing. All that KYC stuff? It’s not to scam you — it’s so they don’t get slapped with fines for money laundering or letting underage kids gamble.
Let me tell you my story. I’d been playing small stakes for a couple of months, everything was smooth. I had only completed Level 1 verification — name, address, and date of birth. Then one day I got lucky and turned a $300 deposit into about $4,000. Naturally, as soon as I requested a withdrawal, they hit me with a Level 2 verification — ID check. I was ready for this because I’d read the rules.
I took a clear photo of my passport with my phone in good lighting — no glare, all corners visible. Uploaded it. Got approved in about 5–6 hours. Tried to withdraw again — boom, Level 3 request: proof of address. That part was tricky because I rent, and the utility bills are in the landlord’s name. But the article mentioned you can use a rental agreement. I found mine, scanned the first and last pages with the address and signatures, and uploaded it. This one took longer — almost a full day. Support was silent, and I started to think, “Great, I’m screwed.” But the next day I got an email saying the verification was successful. The money was sent within an hour.
The takeaway? If you’re not trying to game the system with fake info, VPNs, or forged docs, you’ll be fine. Yeah, the process is long, tedious, and kind of annoying. But that’s just how it works. If you signed up as “John Doe” from Vegas but send in a passport for Vasily Petrov from Saratov — well, sorry, that’s on you. The casino’s just doing its job by flagging suspicious accounts.
I’m reading the comments and honestly can’t believe how many people still believe the fairytale of anonymous crypto in licensed casinos. Guys, come on! This article was written for you. Roobet isn’t some shady underground club — it’s a licensed operator that has to check who’s playing. All that KYC stuff? It’s not to scam you — it’s so they don’t get slapped with fines for money laundering or letting underage kids gamble. Let me tell you my story. I’d been playing small stakes for a couple of months, everything was smooth. I had only completed Level 1 verification — name, address, and date of birth. Then one day I got lucky and turned a $300 deposit into about $4,000. Naturally, as soon as I requested a withdrawal, they hit me with a Level 2 verification — ID check. I was ready for this because I’d read the rules. I took a clear photo of my passport with my phone in good lighting — no glare, all corners visible. Uploaded it. Got approved in about 5–6 hours. Tried to withdraw again — boom, Level 3 request: proof of address. That part was tricky because I rent, and the utility bills are in the landlord’s name. But the article mentioned you can use a rental agreement. I found mine, scanned the first and last pages with the address and signatures, and uploaded it. This one took longer — almost a full day. Support was silent, and I started to think, “Great, I’m screwed.” But the next day I got an email saying the verification was successful. The money was sent within an hour. The takeaway? If you’re not trying to game the system with fake info, VPNs, or forged docs, you’ll be fine. Yeah, the process is long, tedious, and kind of annoying. But that’s just how it works. If you signed up as “John Doe” from Vegas but send in a passport for Vasily Petrov from Saratov — well, sorry, that’s on you. The casino’s just doing its job by flagging suspicious accounts.