Is Trainwreckstv gambling with fake money? Streamer responds

After a run of massive wins, Trainwreckstv has finally responded to the accusations that he gambles with fake money.
Trainwreckstv’s gambling journey in 2026 has been mixed, especially through the first four months. The streamer suffered millions in losses but continued to try his luck on new slots. However, each attempt only yielded more losses, eventually forcing him to take a break from streaming. The break turned out to be beneficial, as the streamer slowly started to turn a profit — in his most recent stream saw him land $3.4m.
His last few streams have made him over $50 million in profit, without counting in the smaller wins. Now that he is closer than ever to breaking even, fans have started accusing him of using fake balances on Stake.
Trainwreckstv responds to accusations of using fake balance
The accusations aren’t entirely absurd. More often than not, streamers have been known to resort to using fake balances, provided by either the gambling platform or the slot developer. In the past, there have been several cases where streamers were caught with stagnant balances across streams that only ever went up.
Sometimes, they stick with lesser-known slots on shady casino sites despite more established options like Stake being available. Winning streaks without a single loss is another major giveaway that has landed many streamers in murky waters. All these signs suggest that a streamer may be using fake money.
Since Trainwreckstv has been on a recent winning streak, the accusations have started pouring in again. Just in May, the streamer landed some of his career-best wins, including $26 million on Angel of Asgard, $15 million on Valhalla 1000, $12 million on Frontier, and more. Combine these with the smaller wins, the streamer had never been closer to finally being in a profit.
Now, the fans have started accusing him of using fake balance from the slot provider to showcase flashy wins. Trainwreckstv has since responded to the claims with his Stake account history that shows $5.7 billion wagered. This success has also contributed to Trainwreckstv’s extensive net worth.
Trainwreckstv denies using fake money on his Kick stream. Image credit: Kick
“I show every piece of information that is honestly none of your fu**king business. If anything, it puts me in danger, and I still show it publicly live on stream. I’ll give you the depo address, blockchain address, I’ll link everything,” Trainwreckstv said.
Those are likely from new viewers who hadn’t registered the four-month slump that had Trainwreckstv wagering at an average RTP of 85%. On a separate stream, Trainwreckstv also mentioned his losses, calling out the fans for not watching his streams when he was losing hundreds of millions of dollars.
“Are these losers watching the streams? Clearly not. Do they understand that it was like it was straight two weeks of loss? No max wins, no nothing,” Trainwreckstv said.
He continued by calling out smaller streamers who indulge in shady activities and promote codes for shady slots, explaining that this is exactly why he’s always been so vocal about exposing them. According to Trainwreckstv, the shady behavior of smaller streamers eventually comes back to bite him, since he’s the “number one in the section”.
Ultimately, there’s no surefire way to confirm that Trainwreckstv doesn’t use fake balance, but the signs are simply not there. Trainwreckstv has been gambling for the longest time, and has had slumps that lasted for months. The max wins he’s been registering lately come after almost four-months of waiting where the streamer was dealing with one loss after another at crypto casinos.
Featured image credit: Trainwreckstv
Fariha Bhatti is a long-time gaming writer who loves competitive FPS games and slots with particularly fun themes. She got her start playing classic games developed by SNK, from legendary fighting game series The King of Fighters to challenging platform franchise Metal Slug. She now spends most of her time playing Valorant and Counter-Strike 2 while working her way through new slot releases to find her next favorite. Fariha has been published at PCGamesN, TalkEsport and ONE Esports.
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