Neon LIVE broadcast screen — Drake Stake brand partnership, explained

What casino is Drake linked to?

Drake is linked to Stake, the crypto casino. The connection is no secret and never has been: he is a disclosed brand partner, not an ordinary player who happens to gamble on camera. That single fact reframes everything you see in one of his sessions, so it is the right place to start.

Short answer: Drake (Aubrey Graham) has been a disclosed Stake brand partner since 2022. His high-stakes sessions are a paid promotion. A 2026 Bloomberg analysis flagged unusual win rates; Stake calls that "categorically incorrect". We report both and make no claim about his personal balance.

The partnership, sourced

This is a commercial relationship on the public record, not an inference. Drake has fronted Stake's marketing since 2022, and the brand has built a chunk of its global visibility around him. He has appeared in co-branded promotions, headline sponsored streams, and the operator's wider sports push, which includes the Formula 1 naming deal with the Sauber team. He has also co-streamed sizeable Stake sessions with Adin Ross, another name long tied to the platform (Decrypt).

A point of precision matters here. Drake is not a "streamer" in the way Roshtein or Trainwreckstv are. He is a brand partner and occasional co-streamer, which is a stronger commercial position, not a weaker one. The money flows toward him to associate his name with the casino, and the sessions are advertising spend by design. That is the lens to read every clip through.

Is it real money? What the evidence says

Here the honest answer is that it is disputed, and we are not going to settle it for you. Two things are true at once and we report both.

First, the finding. A 2026 Bloomberg Businessweek analysis of roughly 1,500 hours of footage reported unusually high win rates for sponsored personalities, Drake among them, playing Stake's in-house games (Bloomberg Businessweek; paywalled). Second, the response. Stake called the findings "categorically incorrect". A contested claim of this kind is a flag to verify, not a verdict, so we hold it as disputed and weigh both sides.

What we will not do is assert anything about Drake's private finances. We cannot know what he personally deposits, wins or loses. What we can describe is the general economics that make sponsored play different from yours. A brand partner is paid to appear; the bankroll on screen may be supplied, backstopped or simply irrelevant to the deal, because the fee is paid for the association regardless of the night's results. The wins that travel are the wins that get posted, and house edge applies to every wager whether the camera keeps the losing run or trims it. None of that is an accusation. It is the structure of the business, and it is why a sponsored balance can't forecast yours. For the seven signals that separate house money from a real account, see how sponsored balances work.

Can you play where Drake plays?

Not on his terms, and for most readers of this site, not at all on the same platform. Stake uses tiered KYC, so the account a normal player opens is verified and limited in ways a headline partnership is not. The site also blocks the United States and the United Kingdom, the two markets a large share of curious viewers sit in, so the "real-money Stake" in the description is not even available to many of the people watching (Decrypt).

Even where access exists, a brand partner's arrangement is not a normal account's. The limits, the attention, and quite possibly the bankroll are part of a marketing deal, not the cashier you would sign up to. The streamed version is not replicable. What an ordinary Stake account actually gets is a separate question, answered on the Stake operator page.

Association is not endorsement

Recording that Drake is publicly linked to Stake is a factual note for independent commentary. It is not an accusation, and it is not a recommendation to play where he plays. Where a normal player can realistically deposit and get paid out is a different list.

Where a normal player can actually play

None of the above points you to a good experience for you. For genuinely high limits and fast payouts an ordinary account can use, rather than a balance that only exists for a sponsorship, Duel is our top pick and the one our roster points to. We rate it on a first-hand deposit-play-withdraw test, not on anything a celebrity does on camera.

FAQ

Is Drake's Stake play real money?

It's a disclosed paid partnership, so the sessions are a promotion rather than a normal player's account. A 2026 Bloomberg analysis flagged unusually high win rates for sponsored personalities including Drake; Stake called the findings "categorically incorrect". We report both sides and make no claim about his private balance.

What casino is Drake linked to?

Stake, a crypto casino. Drake has been a disclosed brand partner since 2022, fronts its sponsorships such as the F1 Sauber naming deal, and has co-streamed large sessions with Adin Ross.

Can I play where Drake plays?

Not on the same terms. Stake uses tiered KYC and blocks the US and UK, and a brand partner's account isn't a normal one. The streamed experience can't be reproduced with your own deposit.

Sources

  1. Decrypt, Who is Drake and why is he linked to crypto casino Stake? — background on the disclosed brand partnership from 2022, the co-branded promotions, the F1 Sauber naming deal, and Stake's US and UK access restrictions.
  2. Bloomberg Businessweek, feature on crypto-casino streaming (2026; paywalled) — analysis of roughly 1,500 hours of footage reporting unusually high win rates for sponsored personalities, including Drake, on Stake's in-house games; Stake called the findings "categorically incorrect".