Is it worth self-excluding from all UK casinos? My honest experience after 2 years off
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Right, so I self-excluded from all UKGC casinos 2 years ago after losing £8,500 in a month on Starburst and Book of Dead at Bet365. Thought I'd share my experience and see what others think.
The good: My bank account actually has money in it now. No more 3am sessions chasing losses on Sweet Bonanza. Sleep better, relationship improved, genuinely feel more in control.
The tricky bit: I've been tempted by uk casinos not on gamstop. Found loads of them - Mystake, GoldenBet, Stake etc. The urge is still there sometimes, especially when I see adverts or mates talking about big wins.
Question is - was the nuclear option of total self-exclusion the right call? Sometimes I think maybe I could have just set limits instead. Anyone else been through this?
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@mike_bet Good on you for sharing this mate. I did similar thing 18 months ago after a nightmare run on Gonzo's Quest at LeoVegas. Lost £6,200 in two weeks.
Honestly, the self-exclusion saved my life. Yeah, I know about casinos not on gamstop uk but I've managed to stay away. The key for me was deleting all gambling apps and blocking the websites on my router.
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Different perspective here - I tried the total ban route but it just made me want it more. Now I use strict deposit limits (£50/month max) at PlayOJO and it works better for me.
@mike_bet The fact you're even aware of the non-Gamstop sites shows you're still thinking about it. Maybe the complete break is what you needed.
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Here's something interesting I worked out about the mathematics of self-exclusion effectiveness:
Success Rate = (Days_Without_Gambling × Willpower_Factor) / (Trigger_Events × Available_Alternatives)
Where Willpower_Factor typically ranges 0.6-0.9, Trigger_Events include stress/boredom, and Available_Alternatives covers non-Gamstop sites.
Basically, blocking 90% of options (UKGC sites) increases success probability exponentially compared to just setting limits.
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@sarah_g How did you handle the urges in the first few months? I'm 3 weeks into my own self-exclusion from Casumo and William Hill after a £4,800 loss streak on Razor Shark.
The worst part is I keep getting emails from comparison sites showing 'amazing bonuses' at places like Donbet and Velobet. It's like they know exactly when you're vulnerable.
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@lucy_wins First few months were brutal, not gonna lie. I replaced the gambling time with gym sessions and started learning Spanish on Duolingo. Sounds daft but having something to 'progress' in helped.
Also unsubscribed from everything gambling-related and changed my email address. Those bonus emails are designed to trigger relapses - they're toxic.
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Unpopular opinion: Self-exclusion can be a crutch. I know blokes who've done it multiple times, always finding ways around it. Real change comes from within.
That said, @mike_bet if it's working for you after 2 years, don't question it. The money you've saved probably covers a nice holiday instead of funding NetEnt's shareholders.
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The irony is that while you're all patting yourselves on the back, the house edge hasn't changed. Starburst is still 96.09% RTP, Sweet Bonanza still 96.48%.
Self-exclusion doesn't make you smarter about gambling - it just removes the option. Which might be exactly what some people need, I suppose.
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@roulette_rob That's exactly the point though isn't it? Sometimes admitting you can't beat the math is the smartest thing you can do.
I tried the 'educated gambler' approach for years - studying RTPs, bonus hunting, all that jazz. Still ended up £12k down over 3 years at 32Red and Mr Green. The house edge always wins eventually.
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Question for the self-excluded crew - do you miss the adrenaline rush? I've been thinking about doing it after a shocking month on Dog House Megaways at Betway (£3,200 down), but worried I'll be bored senseless.
Also, be honest - how many of you have actually tried the non-Gamstop route as a 'workaround'?
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@bonushunter1 I'll be brutally honest - I did try Mystake about 6 months after my self-exclusion. Deposited £200, lost it in 20 minutes on Gates of Olympus. Felt sick immediately.
That experience actually reinforced why I'd self-excluded in the first place. The adrenaline rush lasts minutes, the regret lasts days.
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Here's a comparison of what I've noticed between excluded vs non-excluded life:
Aspect Before Self-Exclusion After Self-Exclusion Monthly Disposable Income £200-400 £1200-1500 Sleep Quality 4/10 (checking bets) 8/10 Relationship Status Constant arguments Much more stable Weekend Activities Betting shops/online Actual hobbies Stress Levels Through the roof Manageable The numbers don't lie. @mike_bet you made the right call mate.
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@newbie_casino That's the trickiest part honestly. I still join the football chat but just don't bet. Sometimes I'll even 'pretend bet' - pick my selections but don't actually place them.
Sounds weird but I get some of the fun without the financial risk. Though I know that wouldn't work for everyone.
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The psychological complexity of gambling self-exclusion reveals fascinating insights into human behavior and addiction patterns.
Consider this probability model for relapse:
P(relapse) = ∫[0,t] λ(s) × e^(-∫[0,s] λ(u)du) ds
Where λ(s) represents the hazard function of relapse at time s, incorporating stress factors, social triggers, and accessibility to non-regulated platforms.
The integration shows that even with UKGC exclusions, the cumulative relapse probability increases with exposure to alternative platforms.
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@vip_player_uk Bloody hell, it's not a PhD thesis mate!

Simple version: staying away from gambling gets easier over time, but there's always some risk of going back, especially with all these offshore sites advertising everywhere.
@mike_bet The fact you bounced back from that Mystake slip-up shows you've got the right mindset.
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Plot twist - what if the real problem isn't gambling but the underlying issues that drive us to it? Boredom, stress, depression, whatever.
Self-exclusion treats the symptom, not the cause. Though I admit, sometimes you need to stop the bleeding before you can heal the wound.
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@mobile_gambler Spot on. I did therapy alongside my self-exclusion from Grosvenor and 888 Casino. Turns out I was chasing losses to feel 'successful' after a rubbish divorce.
Fixed the underlying issue, but still keeping the exclusion in place. Why tempt fate?
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Coming at this from a different angle - I work in the industry (won't say where) and see the data on self-excluded customers.
The success rates are actually pretty good IF people avoid the non-Gamstop sites. But the marketing from those offshore operators specifically targets excluded UK players. It's predatory as hell.
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@slotqueen_uk That's genuinely disturbing. So they're basically profiting from people's attempts to get clean?
Makes me even more sure that my self-exclusion was right. Been 14 months now since I blocked myself from Virgin Games and BetVictor after losing £7,800 in one weekend on Bonanza Megaways.