Shuffle.com — Code Circumvention, Host Interference, and Affiliate Poaching : Part 2
1. Staff-Linked Alt Account IncidentIn early 2025, a player originally referred to Shuffle by me and linked to my code had an alt account promoted to Shuffle’s first MoD (moderator) position for the site’s chatroom.
Noah was well aware of the player’s connection to me, as I had introduced them when the site launched.
That same alt logged over
$12 million in wagers, none of which were credited under my affiliate account.
If Shuffle claims ignorance, that calls into question their
KYC and
AML compliance—especially since this individual was acting in a staff capacity. They were fully aware of the circumstance.
2. Code Circumvention & Player Poaching• One major case involved a high-value player I personally introduced to Noah early on. Despite Noah and Jay confirming the player would be onboarded under my code, Noah later closed a private deal with the player and left me out.
• Some affiliates actively poached by misrepresenting their connection to Shuffle, convincing players that they “worked for Shuffle” and could offer “better treatment” if they switched.
• In other cases, Shuffle hosts directly approached players under my code, offering VIP transfers to alt accounts—usually tied to opposing affiliates. This was especially violating when my top player confirmed it to me directly.
A consistent pattern emerged where players originally linked under my code were redirected or reassigned elsewhere, often with Shuffle’s awareness or encouragement. Hosts enabled and even suggested that players create new accounts and surrender their existing ones, then matched VIP status on the new account—effectively bypassing affiliate tracking entirely.
3. Lack of Transparency & Unequal AccessUntil April 2025, I was never shown a complete player list tied to my code.
Hidden player stats made it impossible to identify who was under me, while other affiliates had direct API and leaderboard access as early as 2023.
Worse, Shuffle began disclosing to players which affiliate they were under—something almost no platform in this industry does for obvious privacy and compliance reasons.
So players knew I was their affiliate, while I had no visibility at all.
This imbalance led to misunderstandings, false assumptions, and financial losses.
I repeatedly requested transparency and was ignored.
That selective data withholding wasn’t just unprofessional—it was targeted and harmful.
4. Harassment & Internal SabotageCertain affiliates and players, clearly favored by Shuffle, made it their mission to attack and discredit me.
They mocked me publicly, harassed me in chat, and even created alt accounts with defamatory names.
Despite repeated reports, Shuffle took no action. Instead, these individuals appeared protected because they were “high-value.”
The message was clear:
ethics were optional if you wagered enough.
SummaryI frequently tipped, rewarded, and engaged players—including ones not under my code—to build activity and goodwill.
My goal was always to grow Shuffle’s community, not extract commissions.
I often paid out more than I earned, trusting Shuffle to support long-term development.
What I got in return was sabotage, poaching, and exclusion from tools and data every other affiliate had.
Despite being one of Shuffle’s top affiliates, I was treated with hostility and disregard.
In an industry defined by numbers, Shuffle’s actions contradicted good-faith business standards and felt both predatory and personal.
DisclaimerI know misunderstandings can happen. I’ve always been open to dialogue and, when given explanations, I often gained perspective even if I disagreed.
But Shuffle repeatedly chose silence, dismissal, or shutdown instead of collaboration.
Out of all my players across every platform, only two ever had any special deal or exception.
Evidence: (more attachments forthcoming)
https://imgur.com/a/NsHcgBF(scroll thru images)
https://imgur.com/a/x6ObN44https://imgur.com/a/Umxw4rv
Evidence Log: Fedupkpc Tip Records for Shuffle.comThis document contains verified tip data exported from platform transactions.
📄 View PDF:
View Full PDF ReportPurpose: Transparency and proof of historical tip distributions between players and affiliates.
Format: Continuous scroll PDF for easy review.
Data Range: March 2023 – July 2025
*this does not include the $20,000 + tips, drops, and event payouts hosted on telegram and paid via cwallet*
To Be Continued → Part 3:: There’s two sides to every story and I fkd up too | : Punitive Actions & Shuffle Airdrop 1 and Other Questionable Behaviors | : Shuffle’s Conduct Outside the Lines⸻