If a promo ever felt “stuck,” bonus weighting was likely the reason. It changes how much of your stakes count toward the target. Same €10 bet, totally different progress. Once I started checking this first, my promos stopped turning into time traps.

One spot where weighting matters is Casino Bodog. It’s built for hopping between slots, classic tables, and live dealers. You get rapid payouts through fast, safe methods, 24/7 support, Hot Drop jackpots, and Mega Rewards that tick up as you play. Lots of games keep the options wide for me.

Bonus Weighting Basics

Bonus weighting is just a contribution. It’s the cut of your stakes that counts toward the wagering target. Here’s how it hits in real life:

  • 100% Contribution: €10 stake = €10 progress
  • 10% Contribution: €10 stake = €1 progress
  • 0% Contribution: €10 stake = €0 progress

So when you see “30x wagering,” don’t stop there. That number only makes sense after you know what counts at 100%.

How Weighting Works at Casinos

Casinos use weighting to control how fast a promo can be cleared. Slots often get full contribution because they swing more. Table games and many live tables can grind with a lower edge, so casinos slow them down with low contribution or full blocks.

One more thing: contribution can change per promo. A welcome offer can treat games one way, a reload can treat them another way. I never assume.

Slots Weighting

Most of the time, slots are the straight road. What I usually see:

  • Many slots at 100%
  • A small list of Excluded Slots at 0%
  • Sometimes, a “reduced” list at 20–50%

So I pick 2–3 slots I’m fine with, then I check the promo terms for an excluded list. If the casino sorts it by provider, I scan for that, too. This saves me from that stupid moment when a slot “plays fine” but counts as zero.

Another trick: I sort slots by provider first. If a casino lets you filter by studios like PragmaticPlay, I’ll pull up a short list, then double-check the promo’s excluded games page. It’s faster than clicking 30 titles and guessing.

Table Games Weighting

Table games are where promos go to die. Some casinos allow blackjack or roulette on promos, but the contribution is often tiny. That means your progress bar moves like it’s in slow motion.

Common table traps I’ve hit (or seen friends hit):

  • Low Contribution: You play for an hour and barely move the target.
  • Max Bet Rule: You go over the cap once, and support has a reason to void the promo.
  • Restricted Play Rule: Some terms are vague on “risk-free” play. If it’s vague, I treat it as strict.

My rule is blunt: if tables count at 0–10%, I don’t use them for clearing. I’ll play them later, on cash balance, when rules don’t hang over the session.

Live Casino Weighting

Live casino looks like the “fun middle,” but it often gets the same treatment as table games. What I expect before I even open the terms:

  • Live roulette and live blackjack often count low, or not at all
  • Live baccarat is often blocked
  • Side bets can be excluded, even if the main bet counts

If you love live games, you can still use them. Just don’t assume they help your wagering.

Example With Real Numbers

Let’s use one clean setup: €100 bonus, 30x wagering. Target progress (at 100% contribution) is €3,000.

Now, watch how weighting flips the story:

  • Path A — Slots (100%)

€3,000 staked → €3,000 progress → done

  • Path B — Live Roulette (10%)

€3,000 staked → €300 progress

You’d need €30,000 staked to reach €3,000 progress

  • Path C — Blackjack (0%)

Any stake → €0 progress

You don’t “lose.” You just picked a road with no meter. This is why two players can get the same promo and have totally different results.

My Two-Minute Check Before I Deposit

Before I recharge my balance, I do a quick scan.

  1. Open the promo’s terms page (not the banner).
  2. Find Contribution / Eligible Games / Wagering Contribution.
  3. Use page search for: %, excluded, live, table, max bet, void.

If the rules don’t say what counts, I treat it as a warning sign.

The Road That Moves The Meter

Slots usually give the cleanest path because they tend to count in full. Live and table games can still be great, but they often come with low contribution and extra rules.

I prefer to clear the rollover with games that move the meter. After that, I play my favorites. That one habit makes promos simple and keeps me out of support chat.

Author

Peter started his tech website because he was motivated by a desire to share his knowledge with the world. He felt that there was a lot of information out there that was either difficult to find or not presented in a way that was easy to understand. His website provides concise, easy-to-understand guides on various topics related to technology. Peter's ultimate goal is to help people become more comfortable and confident with technology. He believes that everyone has the ability to learn and use technology, and his website is designed to provide the tools and information necessary to make that happen.