Crash Out Carl
Joined
2025-12-05
Posts
114
Location
Brighton

Proper gutted here - had £180 riding on a crash game at Tenobet during yesterday's Valorant Champions semifinal between FNATIC and LOUD. Hit 47x multiplier right as the match went to overtime on Bind, tried to cash out and the button went completely grey. Sat there watching it climb to 89x before crashing while I couldn't do anything.

Support said the esports event traffic caused "temporary processing delays" but that seems like bollocks when it's specifically during the biggest moments. Anyone else getting locked out of cash-outs during major tournaments? This happened twice last week during CS2 matches as well.

The pattern seems to be: high-stakes overtime = system conveniently locks you in. Wondering if this is algorithm behaviour or genuine server overload during peak viewership.

netrusher mike
Joined
2024-07-13
Posts
224
Location
London

That's not server overload mate, that's deliberate. Notice how the lock-up always happens when you're ahead? Never seen anyone complain about being locked INTO a losing position. Tenobet knows exactly when to throttle the cash-out feature.

x XSlot King Xx
Joined
2024-06-11
Posts
342
Location
Brighton

Had similar issues but switched to Slottio for crash games during esports events. Their system handled the BLAST Premier finals without any cash-out delays, even during the 2OT map between G2 and Vitality. Managed to pull out at 73x when NAVI was up 15-14 on Ancient.

The difference is night and day - Slottio's infrastructure seems built for high-traffic moments. Tenobet clearly struggles when viewership spikes above 800k concurrent. Lost £340 there during IEM Katowice because of the same grey button nonsense. The 89x you missed would've been a proper result too.

tiebreaknoob
Joined
2024-03-09
Posts
458
Location
Liverpool

Wait, so crash games are linked to live esports matches? I thought the multipliers were just random algorithms. How do you time the cash-outs with tournament moments? Is there a strategy for betting during overtime periods or should I avoid those completely?

CS2Skinner Tom
Joined
2025-01-31
Posts
416
Location
Birmingham

The esports crash correlation isn't officially confirmed but the patterns are undeniable. During last month's Copenhagen Major, I tracked multipliers across four different operators during the NAVI vs FaZe grand final. Every single timeout break saw spikes above 150x, with the highest hitting 284x during the technical pause on Mirage.

What's dodgy about Tenobet specifically is the cash-out throttling coincides with these peaks. I've documented 17 instances where the button locks during 40x+ runs that align with clutch rounds. Meanwhile Mad Casino processed my cash-outs instantly even during the 1v4 Sh1ro clutch that had 1.2M viewers.

The "server overload" excuse doesn't hold water when their regular slots run fine during the same periods. It's targeted behaviour on crash games specifically, probably because they know punters are more likely to hold during tournament hype.

doublesfault dan
Joined
2025-02-05
Posts
391
Location
Glasgow

Hate to say it but I've been tracking this for three months and my records show Tenobet's cash-out "issues" cost me £890 total. The grey button appears at 23x average, always during peak tournament moments. Learned my lesson and moved elsewhere for esports betting.

volleys n value
Joined
2024-01-11
Posts
530
Location
Manchester

Ran the numbers on this phenomenon across 200+ crash sessions during major tournaments. The probability of cash-out failures occurring randomly at multipliers above 40x during high-viewership moments is roughly 0.003%. That's not coincidence.

Tenobet's system shows a clear pattern: cash-out availability drops to 31% during overtime periods compared to 94% during regular rounds. The mathematical evidence suggests deliberate throttling rather than technical limitations. Other operators maintain 85%+ availability during identical traffic periods.

netrusher mike
Joined
2024-07-13
Posts
224
Location
London

That 0.003% probability calculation is interesting but you're missing the obvious explanation here. Tenobet's crash system isn't rigging multipliers during tournaments - they're protecting themselves from coordinated betting patterns. When 2,000+ users are simultaneously riding the same crash session during Valorant Champions overtime, the system throttles cash-outs to prevent mass payouts that would exceed their risk limits.

I've tested this across multiple operators and Rolletto handles the same traffic volume without locking cash-outs, but their maximum multiplier caps at 100x during peak esports events. Different risk management, same protective logic. The £890 loss sucks but that's the cost of not reading how these systems actually work during high-volume periods.