Many players keep balances scattered across several casinos and call it a “big roll”. In reality it’s a blurry number that’s hard to protect. This guide shows how to build a simple multi-casino bankroll map: one master roll, tagged wallets, clear limits and short sessions that all report back to the same total.
Why a map beats “random balances”
- One true number: a single bankroll tracked on paper or in a sheet.
- No ghost money: every deposit/withdrawal updates the master roll.
- Cleaner decisions: you see right away if today’s plan fits your roll.
One bankroll, many wallets
- Define your master roll (money you genuinely can afford to lose).
- Each casino is a wallet lane with its own small slice of that roll.
- Deposits move funds inside the roll, they don’t magically increase it.
Limit lanes for each site
- Per-site cap: no single casino holds more than a set % of the roll.
- Stake range: main bet ≈ 1–2% bankroll, adjusted to the current roll, not the old one.
- Exit rules: daily plan closes at a modest profit or a pre-written red line, then funds return to the lane or to your bank.
Weekly sync: 5-minute routine
- Step 1: note balances on all sites and payment apps.
- Step 2: sum them and compare to your master roll.
- Step 3: if the sum is higher, skim a piece back to your bank.
- Step 4: if lower, reduce stake sizes until numbers match again.
Common mistakes (and quick fixes)
- Calling credit “bankroll”: loans are outside the map — don’t mix them in.
- Chasing across sites: same bad day, different logo → pause instead.
- No written record: keep a one-line log: Date · Sites used · Start roll · End roll.
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