1. Sign Up Anonymously
We begin as a normal visitor with no special access and no warning to the casino. The sign-up flow tells us a lot before any game loads, especially if the language around limits, identity checks, and marketing consent is direct.
A tidy registration form is not enough on its own. We note whether terms are linked where they should be, whether consent boxes are clear, and how much friction appears before the account is ready.
2. Deposit Real Money
Testing with a real deposit changes the review immediately. Payment methods, pending screens, and cashier wording often reveal more about a site than the front page ever does.
We check how quickly the deposit lands, what minimums feel reasonable, and whether bonus prompts remain honest once money is committed. Hidden conditions rarely stay hidden here.
3. Test Games Across Categories
Slots alone can make a lobby look deeper than it really is, so we move across table games, live tables, and at least one lower-profile category. We pay attention to search quality, supplier mix, game loading, and how well the site keeps its balance on mobile.
At this stage we are not chasing novelty. We are asking whether the catalogue feels usable for an ordinary player who wants a short session without fighting the interface.
4. Request a Withdrawal
Withdrawal testing is where casino marketing meets reality. We submit a cash-out request, review the communication around pending times, and watch how visible verification requirements are once the player wants funds back.
Even a fast payout can lose marks if the path to it feels opaque. Good casinos explain each step in plain English and do not turn the cashier into a guessing game.
5. Contact the Support Team
Support should be useful before a complaint becomes serious. We contact the team with practical questions about withdrawals, account tools, or promotion mechanics and judge the tone as much as the accuracy.
Short replies can still be good replies. What matters is whether the answer is specific, calm, and anchored in policy rather than pasted filler.
6. Assign a Score
The final number is the last step, not the starting point. We weigh clarity, value, trust signals, and usability together, then compare those findings with our wider review archive so ratings stay consistent from one brand to the next.
That is how a 4.9 and a 4.2 stay meaningfully different. The score reflects the whole route, not one attractive offer placed at the top of a page.