I know very well what I'm talking about; I recognize the patterns you're exhibiting here quite well and understand them.
The money you get back won't cure you; it's new fuel that feeds the addiction, and in the end, the money flows back to where it came from.
About me:
Heart attack in my early 30s, two weeks in intensive care followed by rehab and therapy. €50,000 in debt that will have to be paid off for the next few years. And why? Through gambling.
You're far from hitting rock bottom, but you're well on your way if you continue like this and don't seek professional help. The abyss is just one step away; you're still several steps away.
Gambling addiction is diagnosed by professionals, not by oneself, and requires professional help.
Answer the following questions without evading them:
- What steps were taken to become gambling-free?
- Have blocking tools been installed to prevent access to gambling websites?
- Who diagnosed the addiction? Self-diagnosis or a specialist?
- What do you hope to gain from the refund?
You're in the freeroller tunnel, you don't perceive what's happening around you, you're focusing on the wrong thing.
Incidentally, I'm not being condescending, I'm just pointing out the problem, and that hurts 😉
Take my words to heart, from someone who almost died from it and was truly on the brink.
Incidentally, I only partially share my knowledge of who handled what, which merchant appears on the map, and who it was.
Why? Because I've partially signed an NDA and some cases still have pending lawsuits. Furthermore, my knowledge would only push you further towards the abyss, and I don't want that; I don't support freerolling.
PS
Generally, chargebacks are only possible once; you'll end up on the providers' well-connected blacklist. This also applies to voluntary refunds. Furthermore, it's partly thanks to this post that no one is issuing refunds anymore. The seriousness of the message is lost when 12 people write the same thing within a few days or even hours.