Responsible Gambling at Wolf Winner: Deposit Limits and Time-Outs
Gambling should stay entertainment, and we build tools into every account to help keep it that way. This page explains the controls you can set with us, the warning signs of a problem, and where to get real help in Australia and beyond. If the fun stops, stepping back is always the right move, and we make it easy.
Tools you can set with us
From your account settings you can put firm boundaries in place before play ever gets out of hand. These controls are yours to adjust, and we honour them without friction. We would rather you set a limit and stay comfortable than chase a loss you did not plan for.
- Deposit limits — daily, weekly or monthly caps on what you can add
- Time-outs — a short cooling-off period that locks play
- Self-exclusion — a longer break when you need to stop entirely
- Reality checks — reminders of how long you have been playing
Setting a deposit limit takes seconds and takes effect immediately, and lowering one applies right away while raising it carries a deliberate delay. Verification also plays a protective role, since it confirms age and identity and keeps accounts to one per person. If you are unsure how to set any of this, our 24/7 live chat will walk you through it.
Warning signs to watch for
Problem gambling rarely announces itself, so it helps to know the signs in yourself or someone close to you. Spending more than you can afford, chasing losses, borrowing to play, or hiding how much you gamble are all signals to pause. Feeling anxious, irritable or preoccupied with gambling is another.
If several of those ring true, treat it seriously and reach out — to us, to a support service, or to someone you trust. Taking a time-out or self-excluding is not failure; it is exactly what these tools are for. Help is confidential and free, and using it is a sign of strength, not weakness.
Where to get help in Australia and internationally
Australia has strong national support, and we point members there first. Gambling Help Online offers free, confidential counselling 24/7 and can be reached on 1800 858 858. It is the most relevant service for Australian players and connects you to local support in your state.
For further help, international organisations complement the local service. Gambling Therapy and BeGambleAware provide advice and self-help tools, and Gamblers Anonymous runs peer-support meetings. Any of these is a good first call if you are worried about your own play or someone else's. You must be 18 or over to play with us, and we would always rather you paused than pushed on.