Over 100 Counter-Strike streamers on Twitch reportedly breaking TOS with gambling sponsors

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Jeremy Gan

120 Counter-Strike streamers have reportedly broken Twitch’s terms of service by accepting gambling sponsorships which could result in a ban.

Over the past few years, Twitch has cracked down on gambling on its platform, updating its rules to prohibit streamers from gambling live or being sponsored by gambling companies. This eventually led to the creation of the Stake-backed streaming platform Kick.

Part of the new rules was that the promotion of skin gambling, particularly Counter-Strike skins, was not allowed, with streamers banned from being sponsored by these sites.

However, many streamers are reportedly disregarding the rule and are still being sponsored by CS gambling sites, putting them at risk of a ban.

CSGORoll was one of the skin gambling sites that sponsored streamers.

In a report by Barron’s on the proliferation of gambling ads on Google and Facebook, they exposed the fact that 120 of the top 300 most-watched Counter-Strike streams on Twitch were sponsored by a gambling site.

Twitch’s community guidelines state that no sponsorships for skins gambling are allowed, with the removal of content, demonetization, or a suspension implemented if a streamer was found to have broken the rules.

According to Barron’s, they spoke to streamers and YouTubers who said that they received offers of nearly $200,000 a month to promote the gambling sites.

Barron’s did a test by reporting a stream to Twitch which was breaking the rules by being sponsored by a gambling site, however, found that the streamer continued streaming live on the platform.

If you were to visit the Counter-Strike page on Twitch, it’s not hard to find several streams with sponsors for skin gambling sites, some of them even openly gambling.

We reported last year in late 2023 that despite the new rules coming into place, skin gambling sponsorships were rampant, and it looks like it still is over one year into its implementation.

Barron’s found that it wasn’t just Twitch, with Google and Meta being implicated in showing skin gambling ads. They found CS gambling sites such as CSGORoll, Key-Drop, and Hellcase were spending the most on advertisements.

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