Spoiler: It’s millions. And yes, he’s now telling people not to take loans to gamble.
TheGoobr just came clean about his finances, and it’s worse than anyone thought. The casino streamer who literally made taking out loans for gambling into content, desperately scrambling for money on stream for 5-6 hours at a time, now drops financial wisdom:
“Please never take loans to gamble. Especially not from the bank.”
He refers to this $14,000 CAD ScotiaLine Line of Credit posted on Twitter in 2024.
Just got a $14,000 CAD loan with the bank, I can finally gamble again. Been waitin for this pic.twitter.com/wmbc1mkCW4
— TheGoobr (@TheGoobr) May 5, 2024
“I genuinely owe people millions of dollars right now,” TheGoobr admitted. “I’ve fucked up my brain and finances for life.”
He’s so deep in the hole that even if he somehow gets out, he doesn’t think he’ll ever be able to hold onto money without gambling it away.
How Did He Get There?
TheGoobr’s been streaming gambling since 2020, and from day one it’s been a complete disaster. He loses everything, takes out loans, loses that, rinses and repeats. A few months in, he actually quit because he was broke and depressed.
But then he watched streamers make 7-9 figures with fake balances and hidden losses, got pissed off, and came back to stream “authentic” gambling.
His whole idea was supposed to be different. No fake balances. No wins that you can never withdraw. No hiding losses. Just pure, unfiltered gambling in all its ugly glory.
And it worked. TheGoobr built a following by being the anti-establishment casino streamer. While everyone else was painting a glossy picture, he was showing the actual nightmare. People watched him spiral, watched him panic, watched him frantically hunt for loans at 3 AM.
“Did I normalize irresponsible gambling? Absolutely I did. I admit.”
So now we’re at the part where TheGoobr, drowning in millions of debt and still hunting for new loans, tries to warn others against doing exactly what he’s doing.
Millions in debt. Still borrowing. Still gambling. Still streaming. That’s where we are.
