Responsible Gaming overview
This page is part of the legal and information centre for Crown Perth Online Casino. It is written to help visitors understand how the website is intended to work, how information is presented, and what responsibilities visitors should keep in mind.
For the main site, return to the homepage or visit the About, Gaming and FAQ sections.
Gambling-related content is intended for adults only. Always follow the laws and age restrictions that apply in your location.
Responsible Gaming Summary
Casino-related entertainment should never be treated as a source of income, a financial plan or a way to recover losses.
Adults who choose to gamble should do so with clear limits, realistic expectations and awareness of risk.
Set practical limits
Decide on a spending limit before play begins and only use money that is not needed for rent, bills, food, savings, family responsibilities or debt repayment.
Set a time limit as well as a money limit. Long sessions can reduce judgement and make losses feel less noticeable.
Recognise warning signs
Warning signs may include chasing losses, hiding gambling activity, borrowing money to gamble, missing work or family obligations, feeling anxious about betting, or being unable to stop after reaching a limit.
If gambling stops feeling like entertainment and starts feeling necessary, stressful or secretive, it may be time to pause and seek support.
Use safer-play tools
Many gambling operators provide deposit limits, loss limits, session reminders, time-outs, account history, cooling-off periods and self-exclusion options.
Use these tools early. They are most effective when set before emotions or losses influence decisions.
Protect young and vulnerable people
Gambling is for adults only. Devices, passwords and payment methods should be protected so minors cannot access gambling content or accounts.
Anyone who feels vulnerable, pressured or financially stressed should avoid gambling and seek support from trusted people or professional services.
When to take a break
Take a break if you are tired, upset, intoxicated, trying to win back losses, gambling with borrowed money or increasing stakes to feel excitement.
A break can be a short pause, a longer timeout or formal self-exclusion depending on the situation.
Getting help
If gambling is causing harm, contact local support services, financial counsellors, mental-health professionals or gambling helplines available in your region.
Support is not only for crisis situations. Early conversations can prevent problems from becoming more serious.