Misconceptions about the game rarely stem from its actual mechanics. External factors create doubt:
Aggressive Marketing Tactics
Some affiliates promote Mines with unrealistic income promises. āEarn ā¹50,000 dailyā headlines attract attention but set false expectations. The game offers entertainment and win potential, not guaranteed income. When players lose after believing exaggerated claims, they blame the game instead of the misleading promotion.
Third-Party Scam Services
Websites and Telegram channels sell āguaranteed prediction toolsā or āwinning signalsā for Mines. These services are fraudulent. No external tool can predict Provably Fair outcomes. Players who purchase these scams and lose money then assume the game itself cheated them.
Psychology of Gambling Losses
Losing streaks happen in all chance-based games. Our brains seek patterns and explanations for randomness. After several losing rounds, players may feel the system targets them personally. This emotional response doesnāt reflect actual game manipulation, just standard probability playing out.
The gameās transparency makes it easy to verify fairness. Those claiming fraud rarely check the Provably Fair seeds or understand how cryptographic verification works.