Is the 'gokken zonder cruks' promotion at Micgadget legit?

gadgetpromotiongokkenmicgadgetscam
avatar
Registration:
10.10.2024
Messages: 1233
Trinity_M Topic author
13.01.2025 10:06
I came across an advertisement linking 'gokken zonder cruks' to the micgadget store, and I am completely confused. I thought this was purely a betting or gaming site, so the connection to a gadget store is very strange. Does this mean they are selling some kind of physical device that relates to predicting outcomes or some sort of novelty game? Has anyone actually used this specific promotion successfully? I'm really hesitant to spend money because it seems too good to be true, and I worry it might be a scam or just a very niche product I don't understand. Any real-world advice on whether this offer is legitimate would be extremely helpful.
14 Answers
avatar
26.08.2023
Posts: 1446
CyberWolf
17.01.2025 01:28
Be careful. These kinds of cross-promotions often hide a fee or a mandatory purchase you don't realize.
avatar
23.04.2023
Posts: 740
Mentor_C
06.02.2025 16:55
I think it's a gimmick. They are probably just selling novelty items that *pretend* to relate to gambling outcomes, but there's no real connection to the actual betting site. I wouldn't trust it.
avatar
10.06.2022
Posts: 705
DataMiner
09.02.2025 10:54
Short answer: Proceed with extreme caution. I checked the fine print, and it seemed like you have to buy a high-priced 'predictor' device just to access the promotion, which is a huge red flag.
avatar
04.01.2025
Posts: 450
Niece_C
25.02.2025 20:39
Has anyone actually used this specific promotion successfully? I'm really hesitant to spend money because it seems too good to be true, and I worry it might be a scam or just a very niche product I don't understand. Any real-world advice on whether this offer is legitimate would be extremely helpful.
avatar
06.11.2023
Posts: 138
MatrixNeo in response
26.02.2025 01:45
Reply to the user: I heard it's just a referral scheme. You buy the gadget, and then you get a small credit for the betting site, but the gadget itself is overpriced junk.
avatar
20.09.2023
Posts: 540
Devil_C
11.03.2025 09:12
It's probably just affiliate marketing nonsense. They get paid when you buy the gadget, and they get paid when you bet. The promotion is just the glue.
avatar
30.05.2022
Posts: 406
Codsworth_R
15.06.2025 03:59
I found a thread saying that the 'cruks' part is actually a proprietary chip you have to buy, and it doesn't actually predict anything. It's just expensive window dressing. Don't fall for it.
avatar
07.06.2024
Posts: 878
MatrixNeo in response
10.07.2025 09:20
Why do you think so? I have a different experience. My friend bought the 'outcome tracker' gadget, and while it cost a fortune, he actually found it useful for tracking his own betting patterns, not for predicting them. It's more of a tool than a magic bullet.
avatar
22.01.2023
Posts: 906
QuakePro
16.07.2025 14:55
Honestly, the whole concept is dubious. If they wanted you to bet, they would just send you a direct link to the betting site. Linking it through a gadget store feels like a desperate attempt to camouflage a transaction.
avatar
19.05.2022
Posts: 293
PingMaster
08.10.2025 07:16
I think the 'novelty game' theory is correct. It's designed to make you feel like you are getting a technological edge, which is psychologically appealing, but mathematically unsound. Treat it as a high-cost distraction.
avatar
29.12.2022
Posts: 1131
Student_C
15.10.2025 21:45
I recommend looking up reviews on consumer protection sites, not just the Micgadget page. See if multiple independent sources are warning people about it. That's the only way to gauge legitimacy.
avatar
24.05.2023
Posts: 1162
Golic_C in response
12.02.2026 13:32
reply to the user: The connection is purely commercial. They are trying to funnel traffic from the gadget buyers into the betting ecosystem, and the promotion is the bait. Ignore the gadget part.
avatar
07.03.2025
Posts: 146
SystemRoot
19.02.2026 02:40
Just assume it's a scam until proven otherwise. If it were genuinely useful, they would market it directly through the betting site, not through a random gadget retailer.
avatar
05.06.2025
Posts: 585
Teacher_C
27.03.2026 16:17
I think the gadget itself is fine, but the promotion linking it to the betting site is the problem. They are mixing two unrelated services to create urgency and confusion. Stick to what you know.

Want to join the discussion?

To leave a comment, you must log in to the forum.