Affiliate Disclosure
Issued: June 2026
This page sets out exactly how this website ("Site", "we", "us") earns revenue, and what that arrangement genuinely means for the Gates of Olympus content and casino comparisons published throughout the Site. Gates of Olympus is a Pragmatic Play video slot, distributed through a wide range of independently licensed online casinos. This Site is not one of them – we operate as an independent affiliate and editorial publisher, reviewing both the game and the platforms where it can be played.
Before acting on anything written here, particularly a casino recommendation, we think it genuinely matters that you understand exactly how the money flows and what limits we place around it.
// Contents
// The Basic Funding Mechanism
Click a link here to a casino offering Gates of Olympus, register, and make a qualifying deposit, and that casino may pay us a referral fee. This is the standard model relied on by independent gambling comparison sites generally, and it closely resembles how independent review sites function across many industries that have nothing to do with gambling at all. It is what keeps this content free for every reader.
That fee comes entirely from the casino’s own marketing budget. It adds no cost to your deposit, changes no bonus term, and has zero effect on how Gates of Olympus actually plays – the tumble mechanic and multiplier symbols behave identically whether or not you arrived through a link on this Site.
We mention this distinction specifically because it’s the most common misconception readers raise with us: the assumption that an affiliate link somehow costs the player more, or quietly shifts the game mechanics in the operator’s favor. Neither is true, and we wanted to address it directly rather than leave it unstated.
// What Our Partnerships Actually Look Like
We work with a number of licensed operators offering Gates of Olympus. Commission arrangements vary by partner and generally fall into one of these structures:
- Revenue share – an ongoing percentage of net revenue from players we’ve referred.
- Cost per acquisition (CPA) – a single fixed payment when a referred player crosses a deposit threshold.
- A hybrid combining elements of both.
We don’t publish the specific terms behind any individual deal, since these are commercially sensitive arrangements. What we will say plainly: neither the size nor the structure of any commission influences which casinos appear in our comparisons, or how we describe them. The proof of that claim sits in the section on editorial independence: one fixed bar, applied identically no matter what’s on the table commercially.
// How a Click Gets Tracked
Click through to a partner casino, and a tracking cookie lands on your device, noting that the click came from here. Register and deposit within that operator’s attribution window – typically around 30 days – and we receive credit for the referral.
That’s genuinely the entire mechanism. The cookie doesn’t identify you personally, doesn’t follow your activity once you’re on the casino’s platform, and isn’t used to build any advertising profile. Just a click and a timestamp. Full technical detail lives in our separate Cookie Policy.
// Why Commission Doesn't Drive Our Recommendations
Fair question worth asking directly: if certain casinos pay us more, does that shape what we write about them? We hold every operator to one fixed standard, regardless of payout:
- A current, independently verifiable gambling license.
- Bet limits, withdrawal terms, and promo rules written in language anyone can actually follow.
- Clear disclosure of which RTP version of Gates of Olympus the casino is actually running, since Pragmatic Play ships more than one configuration.
- A demo mode that genuinely works and isn’t hidden away.
- Mobile performance we’ve personally tested, not just assumed.
- Responsible gambling tools sitting in plain sight, not buried behind a ticket request.
Miss any of those, and a casino doesn’t make our list – doesn’t matter what they’re offering us commercially. These mirror what we lay out in more depth on our Online Casinos comparison page, and we don’t treat an initial pass as permanent; we periodically reassess every listed operator against these same criteria.
When something changes for the worse – a license lapses, complaints accumulate, withdrawals slow down – we pull or update that listing regardless of what it costs us commercially in the process.
// Spotting an Affiliate Link
A considerable number of the casino links scattered through this Site are affiliate links. We don’t tag each one individually, since that would clutter the reading experience – instead, this document discloses the relationship clearly, linked from everywhere on the Site. Safe rule of thumb: assume any casino link here could be earning us something.
Why We Keep Checking, Not Just Listing Once
A casino that passed our checks when we first listed it can change – licenses lapse, withdrawal practices slip, player complaints accumulate. A one-time pass isn’t a permanent guarantee, so we periodically revisit the Gates of Olympus casinos we feature using the same criteria on editorial independence. If your own experience with a listed operator doesn’t match what we’ve written, we genuinely want to hear about it – that kind of direct feedback shapes our reassessments more than any internal schedule on our end.
// We Don't Promise You'll Win Anything
Nothing here, or anywhere on this Site, guarantees an outcome if you play Gates of Olympus. RTP figures we cite – 96.5% in the common build, though some casinos run 95.51% or 94.5% instead – come straight from Pragmatic Play’s own published figures and reflect long-term averages, not a forecast for your next session. Bonus terms and bet limits are entirely up to each casino and can shift without telling us – always double-check directly with whichever operator you’re using before depositing.
Same goes for specific mechanics we describe – the tumble feature, multipliers up to 500x, the 5,000x cap. We write these up as accurately as we can based on what Pragmatic Play has published, but the developer can update things whenever, and we can’t promise every casino runs the identical build.
// The Risk Is Entirely Yours
Real money gambling carries real risk, full stop. Click through from here and choose to play for real, and that decision – along with whatever happens financially – is yours alone. Gates of Olympus carries an official high-volatility rating, meaning long stretches without a meaningful win are completely normal, not a sign something’s broken. Set your deposit and loss limits before you start; our Responsible Gambling page has resources for exactly that.
// Where We Stop Being Involved
We don’t run, manage, or have any access to a casino’s systems, accounts, or money, and we can’t step into a dispute between you and an operator. If something goes sideways on a platform you’ve joined, talk to that operator’s support first, and escalate to their regulator only if it stays unresolved.
Bonus Size Has Nothing to Do With Our Pay
Whether a casino runs a huge welcome bonus or a tiny one has zero connection to whether or how much they pay us. Those are entirely separate calls made by the operator alone. A bigger bonus doesn’t mean a bigger commission, and we don’t factor bonus size into our editorial judgment at all – it just isn’t a reliable signal of how good a platform actually is.
// The Regulatory Side
Gambling affiliate marketing is subject to advertising and disclosure rules in plenty of places. This page aims to meet the transparency bar expected across most regulated markets. Not sure whether viewing gambling affiliate content is allowed where you live? Check before continuing – we can’t give jurisdiction-specific legal advice.
// Keeping This Up to Date
We update this disclosure whenever our partnerships or relevant standards shift. Whatever’s posted here at any moment is the current version.
// Get in Touch
Questions about how our affiliate deals work, or a concern that something we’ve written doesn’t match a casino’s actual behavior, go through the contact form. We genuinely look into this kind of feedback rather than brushing it off, and we welcome reports from readers whose experience at a listed casino diverges from what we’ve described.
Transparency on this whole topic isn’t something we observe reluctantly because a regulator requires it – it’s a standard we want readers actively holding us to, and this document is written with that in mind.
