Play with limits
Budget, time, and loss limits are most effective when set before the session begins.
Gaming should stay controlled and enjoyable. This page brings the most useful safer-play guidance together in one place: self-check habits, practical tools, warning signs, and support routes that are easy to act on.
Budget, time, and loss limits are most effective when set before the session begins.
Stress, secrecy, and chasing losses are warning signs worth taking seriously.
Accounts, devices, and payment details should always be kept away from underage users.
External organisations can help if gambling stops feeling controlled or enjoyable.
Players should expect access to practical control tools such as time-out options, deposit or loss limits, reality checks, and longer self-exclusion routes. The right tool depends on the goal: a short cooling-off period, stronger spending control, or a more serious break from gambling entirely.
Common signs include spending more time or money than planned, hiding gambling from other people, feeling anxious when you are not playing, or using gambling sessions to try to recover losses from earlier play. Recognising those patterns early makes it easier to act before they become harder to control.
Accounts, devices, and payment methods should be kept out of reach of minors. If gambling stops feeling controlled, stronger steps may be needed: ask for a break in access, remove saved payment details, talk to someone you trust, or seek outside support instead of trying to handle the issue in silence.
If you need outside help, consider contacting Gamblers Anonymous or reaching out to the site support team at [email protected] to ask about safer-play tools and account restrictions.