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Tournaments

Timed, leaderboard-ranked competition — run by communities, funded by sponsors.

Tournaments turn ordinary play into a race. Players enter, compete by playing games over a set period, and climb a live leaderboard ranked by performance. When the clock runs out, the top of the board splits the prize pool.

How they work

  • Entry — players join a tournament, typically for an entry fee that feeds the prize pool.
  • Compete — every qualifying play counts toward a player's standing on the leaderboard.
  • Live standings — the leaderboard updates in real time, so players always know where they rank.
  • Payout — when the tournament ends, the prize pool is distributed across the top ranks.

Fair-play controls, such as per-game bet caps, keep tournaments competitive rather than a race to the biggest single wager.

What makes ours different

Two features turn tournaments from a game mode into a genuine growth and engagement engine:

Community tournaments. Any community can run its own tournament for its members. Instead of waiting for the platform to host an event, a group can spin one up itself — giving communities a reason to gather, compete, and stay active.

Sponsored tournaments. A sponsor can fund the prize pool directly. Brands, communities, and high-rollers can put up prizes to draw a crowd and put their name on the event. Sponsorship turns a tournament into a marketing surface and a way to reward a community at once.

Together, these make tournaments a flywheel: communities create events, sponsors fund them, players compete, and the whole ecosystem gets more active. See Communities & Telegram for how this ties into the social layer.