Fairspin Launches £40,000 Tournament with Premium Motors and Watches Up for Grabs
Fairspin has rolled out its Royale Run Tournament, putting 50,000 USDT on the line for players willing to chase some serious hardware. Running through to Christmas Day, the promotion splits the prize pool across 100 finishers. The top three positions are where the real money sits, though.
Premium Prizes for Top Three Finishers
Here’s where it gets interesting. Rather than straight cash payouts, the podium finishers can opt for certificates towards premium wheels and timepieces. First place gets their pick of a motor. Second place can claim a motorcycle, and third takes home a certificate for a luxury watch. Not your typical tournament prizes, and a smart move by Fairspin to stand out in a crowded market.
The top three positions account for over 70% of the total prize pool, so there’s a clear incentive to push for the podium rather than settling for a mid-table finish.
How the Tournament Works
Entry is straightforward enough. Players hit the participate button and start wagering across any game in Fairspin’s casino. Every bet generates TFS tokens, which convert into tournament points and determine your position on the leaderboard.
The beauty of this setup is its simplicity. No game restrictions, no minimum bet requirements listed, just pure volume driving your position. Cash wagers only, which keeps things fair and prevents bonus abuse skewing the competition.
Six-Week Competition Window
With the tournament kicking off on November 15 and running through December 25, participants have got six weeks to build their position. That’s a proper timeframe. Not one of those weekend blitzes where only the heaviest hitters stand a chance.
The 100-player payout structure means there’s value down the table, though the heavy weighting towards the top three makes this a tournament for serious players rather than casual punters hoping for a lucky break.
What the team thinks
Sheena McAllister says:
While tournaments with luxury prizes certainly create headline-grabbing promotions, operators targeting UK players need to remember that the UKGC takes a particularly dim view of marketing that emphasizes material rewards over entertainment value. The shift from cash to certificates for premium goods could raise questions about prize fulfillment transparency and whether players fully understand redemption terms before participating. Worth noting that any operator advertising this to British consumers should ensure their bonus terms clearly detail the certificate mechanics and any geographic restrictions on prize delivery.