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R Kings and other car raffles

13031323335

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    However, in doing some research around this, I did find that there is a perceived "Value" to the entrant in being asked a question, rather than simply being entered into a prize draw by "paying and then praying". An entrant who has to answer even a very simple question, can form a view that they have perhaps slightly better odds than being able to enter without answering one, as perhaps a few people here and there will accidentally pick the wrong answer, or actually get it wrong through inattention or some other reason (they could be "on the drink" and read it wrong or whatever) and then there is "one less" person competing against them in the random draw......that's why, I'd personally prefer to enter a "Question style competition with prize draw", rather than just a straight raffle without any question. (But a few wrong answers here and there, out of what are often thousands of entrants, again would unlikely be considered "significant" for the purposes of giving "legal cover", but would give a "marginal increase" to a players odds.).

    The research I read also mentioned that some people feel like they have a slightly enhanced connection to the whole experience, because they had to do a simple task as part of it. So, asking a simple question, does have merit, but not the one that people might think (legal protection).

    Apparently, the task of "picking your own numbers" in the National Lottery, gives people a feeling that they have some form of connection to the game and can perhaps use their "lucky number" or numbers that mean something to them, to influence the outcome (even though we all know in reality its pure randomness).....its just a psychological thing. In these competitions, they don't typically let you choose your numbers, as that risks it being defined as "betting" by the gambling commission (as you are in effect placing a bet that your chosen number will be drawn). If a number is randomly allocated to you for your ticket, after you have paid, then you are not betting on a number. So, as they can't legally let you chose your numbers, allowing you to answer a simple question, can instead, give a player, a similar belief that they can in someway influence their outcome (even though 99.9% or higher, are likely to pass that test and be in the random draw!)

    The more you look into this whole area, the more you realise that the laws around this are quite nuanced. Make a slight change here or there to how you operate your draw, without understanding the laws exactly, and "bang", your the wrong side of it.

    I'm surprised there are so many people in these businesses, because they are much more complicated to operate within the law than you would think......unless they are like "Mecca" for those who think they can make a quick buck and don't worry about what might come down the road.....or maybe they all think they can point at the others operating the exact same and say "I thought I was doing it all legally, because I was copying what themin's were doing"???

    Post edited by JackDee123 on


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 17,760 Mod ✭✭✭✭Henry Ford III


    Any truth in the rumours of potential money laundering and links to subversives and organised crime?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,562 ✭✭✭celt262


    Would it not need to be a cash business to be able to launder money?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Cash is only for small timers. Plenty of crims are tied up to the London financial centre and move their money through their people there who work and own hedge funds and private equity firms.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    I’d doubt if there are many, if any, of these businesses involved in money laundering. It would be very difficult to do, as pretty much 100% of the money comes to them via card processors, where there is (at least meant to be) humans and systems monitoring for “transaction laundering”, so anyone at that craic would need to either know how to avoid the red flags, or be operating with a “friendly” processor who was helping them avoid detection/happy to turn a blind eye to it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    You see, this is what's fundamentally wrong with this industry. Many promoters appear to view those that choose to enter via the "free alternative route" as nothing more than spongers, that are trying to "steal" from them, and therefore they may not treat them as fairly as they should.

    The reality is that those free entrants, are the very reason why they are given permission under the law to be allowed to operate this type of business at all. So they should in a way, welcome them......its up to them to make their competition so attractive and compelling, that more people will choose to pay, for the convenience of online entry, rather than opt for a "free postal" entry.

    Really, they should view having to offer and actually genuinely process entries via an alternative free entry method, such as by ordinary post, as being akin to paying a licence fee to be allowed to operate this "not lottery", but "really a lottery", business.

    The companies who don't get this, are, I'm sorry to say, most likely doomed, in the long term...... the government are currently reviewing the Gambling Act 2005 and are particularly looking at how they can amend it to deal with rogue elements within the paid prize draw and competition market.......one such proposal is to put a restriction, that the most they can offer per prize is £25,000 and they could sell no more than £1m of tickets per year......that would put the "kibosh" on many of these guys.......... I guess, they will only have themselves to blame, if such restrictions come into effect.......they had the opportunity to "become as big as they wanted", but most appear to have forgotten, that it comes with a quasi "licensing fee", paid per competition, to "the people" on a variable basis.


    "As ye sow, ye shall reap", very much comes to mind!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,715 ✭✭✭corks finest


    if you’d care to actually look properly at tbe post I was referring to langer

    you’d not need to be such a silly maneen



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Very sorry for not knowing that, but without you "linking a quote" to your conversation with Langer in this now 58 page long thread, it was pretty much impossible to understand the relevance of your comment (without searching all of the 57 previous pages to find it!). Anyway, do you have any thoughts on the "current topic" of this revived thread, or did you wish to only see how your old mate "Langer" was getting on, from God knows how many years ago, on this topic?



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    So....... I posted some free postal entries in the same town as one of these company's are based, for a competition with about 2 weeks until closing:

    • I took a video showing them being posted, showing that all of the details requested were correctly filled in, that the question was correctly answered, and the handwriting was clearly legible, and that they had the correct postage.
    • I also included in the video, a "google search" for "date and time at my location", on another phone, to provide proof of when the video was taken, which provides hard evidence of the "date and time" of posting. This is the exact same method used by most of these company's to verify the date and time that they did their draw, if you have ever watched them live or watched them back later.
    • I also posted another postcard, at the same time and along with the competition entries (and shown in the video too), to a private address, to someone in that same town too, as a "tracer". This was to provide evidence of the time taken to reach them and to avoid any ability to claim "maybe the postal service lost them".
    • My "tracer" arrived two days later and I have another video using the same method as above, to provide evidence of the date and time of its arrival (as well as it having the Royal Mail's official processing date on it).
    • My postal entries have not been added by the company in question and there are still many unallocated entries according to their website and still plenty of time to the closing of the competition.
    • I have taken screenshots, to prove the competition hasn't yet "sold out", with verified date and time also and will continue to do this daily, until the competition closes, as well as a daily screenshot of my account with them, showing that my entries haven't been added.
    • I also have an email from them confirming I have an account registered with them and again screenshots that confirm the details I filled out on the postal entries match those in my registered account.

    The question is, if they don't add them, and therefore deprive me of the opportunity to win the prize, would they have any liability towards me?

    I've not asked a solicitor yet, but its an interesting thought, don't you think?

    Here's my "layman" thoughts:

    • They are clearly in breach of their Terms and Conditions, on their website.....which again, as you might of guessed, I have screenshots of, to verify.
    • These Terms and Conditions form a contract between the company and the competition entrants, regardless of which entry method they choose to enter a competition by.
    • And if they fail to enter my postal entries, then I will have clearly suffered at least the loss of the stamps and my time, and in theory, the loss of the opportunity to win the prize, caused by their breach of this contract, written by them
    • However, my understanding is that normally for a liability to exist, there must be some form of "consideration" i.e. actual money paid or "money's worth" involved. In this case there isn't, as stamps don't legally count as a form of money (I've checked that one...... its actually why they can then be used, under the law, as a method to provide a "free entry route").

    So, depending on how "enforceable" this contract is and depending on what my actual loss would be defined as, there may or may not be cause for action.

    Any legal experts out there, who care to share a view on this?

    I'm not asking for legal advice, as I understand it wouldn't be appropriate to give that on a public forum like this.......more an "indication" of what the legal options available might be in this scenario?

    Post edited by JackDee123 on


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,464 ✭✭✭rodge123


    Jaysus that’s some serious effort you went to, fair play.

    If I remember right, I only took screenshots of mine at the time before posting.

    I don’t think they put up the list of entries until 30 minutes before the draw, so you will be able to confirm then if your name is entered using their name search on the list of entries.

    I actually emailed then when my two entries we not entered and provided images of my postcards in the email.

    They never responded.

    I also emailed the gambling commission UK with the details, they sent me a generic response but added maybe trading standards might be interested if terms and conditions broken.

    I think you google ITV free entry competitions, they got into trouble a few years back for not entering them. Not sure if same rules apply here.

    I finally forwarded on my emails to the guardian newspaper. No response.

    I left it at that, life with a family of two kids is too busy to be wasting my time on it.

    just note they are UK based so no point reporting to any Irish authorities.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    The dispute is between you and them. There is no enforcement of their rules by the State as they are not regulated entity.

    You could take an action against them for damages for breach of contract. If you succeeded, what would a Judge award you for missing out on entering a competition? How do you calculate the loss you suffered by not being entered?

    Even then, is there a contract, is free entry just an invitation to treat that they are under no obligation to complete the transaction. They’ve provided a free entry route but are they legally obliged to open the envelope when they receive it?

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,464 ✭✭✭rodge123


    Here’s a link to ITV not entering free entries.

    Again, I don’t have a clue if comparable to these types of competitions.

    https://adlaw.lewissilkin.com/post/102gdaz/itv-potentially-facing-big-fine-for-ignoring-the-alternative-free-entry-route-for



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Having read a bit more on contract law and what is accepted as a form of "consideration", while the stamps on the post card may not to be adequate to form "consideration", the postcards themselves may count as consideration, because they are "personal property" exchanged as part of the contract, and they do have a monetary value.....albeit, very small. Apparently from a legal perspective, the value of the consideration is not important, only that there was something that meets the legal definition of "consideration", given from one party to the other. So, in theory:

    • The competition company entered into a contract with me, defined by their terms and conditions.
    • I provided consideration, as requested by them, in the form of a postcard sent to them, containing a "set of information", specified by them in the T+C's (and I have strong evidence to support my claim that they received that "consideration")
    • I also have strong evidence to support my claim that I performed all obligations I had under that contract (the postcard entries were correctly completed, with matching details on a registered account with them and all before the closing date of the competition).

    So, if my postal entries are not added and I don't feature in the randow draw, there would appear, at least from my "layman" perspective, to be a legal case for breach of contract and the losses therein incurred by me, which could be defined as:

    • The costs I incurred of stamps, postcards and travel to post.
    • The time I spent filling these out and posting them.
    • The loss of opportunity, which was promised to me, by them, to win a prize of substantial value.

    In summary, from a legal perspective, they appear to be the "promisor" and I am the "promisse", in a legally binding contract for the "promise" of the opportunity to win a prize, by offering consideration, either in terms of a payment made to them on their website, or consideration in the form of a postcard, sent by ordinary post. To not keep that "promise", by not entering my postal entry into the "random draw pool", they will have deprived me of the opportunity promised under the contract and hence will have breached that contract.

    Any thoughts or legal experts want to provide an "indication", on this interesting "chain of thought"?

    Post edited by JackDee123 on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Based on that logic, which seems sound, the most you could claim for is equivalent of the entry fees and stamps and stationary. Not worth it. Make an interesting article for the Law Society Gazette though.

    If that the most these companies stand to lose in theory, I can see why they don’t bother opening free entries.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Interesting......my own "layman" thoughts......

    • They are under obligation by the contract establish by their Terms and Conditions, to enter all postal entries received before the closing date, that meet the eligibility criteria, so to not do so, either by deliberate action or even by accident (excepting Force Majeure), would be a breach of this contract.
    • Potential losses, as per my post above. You might even be able to add in "emotional distress" or such like, for falsely building your hope up......I don't know, just throwing ideas!


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  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Yeah, sounds like a good comparison, apart from ITV having to answer to OFCOM, which wouldn't apply to these competitions, unless they were broadcasting them on TV or Radio etc, I guess?



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    You made good efforts too, Rodge...... However, I can go much further, to the "nth degree" in fact, to nail something down....... plenty of free time and no wife, kids nor even a dog to have to worry about! 😊

    The Guardian probably weren't too interested as it "wasn't a big enough story" for them, and your evidence could be refuted by the competition company. Whereas, it would be hard to refute mine, and with some of the names involved, it could just be a "big enough" story! 😜



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    The adverse publicity could be their biggest issue.....that and a potential investigation by the authorities!



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    And the "value of the lost opportunity".......it could be argued two ways, I'm sure:

    • A maximum of the value of the prize that I could have won, if I had of been entered into the competition (call this the "ceiling" value)
    • A minimum of (Income generated by the competition / total number of entries received) .......which is basically the average price of a ticket that they achieved (call this the "floor" value)

    So, the value of this "element" of any claim, could in theory range from "Average ticket price achieved" to "Value of the Prize Awarded" to the actual winner.

    I'm guessing that a pragmatic view for assessing this would be to examine what actually happened in terms of the winning entrant.

    • If the winner "won" with having entered with only 1 entry (It does happen), and I could prove that I was deprived of at least one entry, then, it might be appropriate to award damages as the full value of the prize that I could have won.
    • Similarly, if the winner "won", having entered with 20 entries, and I could prove that I was deprived of, say 5 entries, then it could seem fair that the compensatory award should be fairly set at 25% of the prize value. Although, you could still argue that any one of my 5 had equal chance of winning, so this 25% value might only serve as an argument to fix a "floor" value, with a "ceiling" still set at the full value of the prize.........

    ...... I'm sure it would be a very interesting case for a court to decide.......Just more thoughts.

    Post edited by JackDee123 on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    This is all great in theory but in reality, I don’t think you want to mess with the ‘organisations’ behind these raffles. I don’t think you’d be getting a solicitor’s letter in response to your action…

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



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  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Perhaps, but I've never been known to "back away" from anything, due to fear or intimidation. I'm the type of person who'd not give a thief £1, if the option was "give me the pound or I will shoot you", with the loaded gun pointed right at my head. I'd simply say "ok, see you in hell, then I guess". Similarly, if my family was under some sort of threat or intimidation, while unpleasant, it would not deter me in the slightest. I've seen off a few "big scary clowns" in the past, and I'm sure I will have to again in the future......the world is unfortunately populated by many of them. 🤔☺️



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,193 ✭✭✭mikeecho


    @JackDee123 let us know how you get on.



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Will do......there is still time for the company concerned to add in my postal entries. Perhaps they are inundated with postal entries at the minute and just "slow" to process them.......so, I'm still giving them the benefit of the doubt, for now......their opportunity to comply with their terms and conditions, runs until the competition officially closes, I guess. After that, if not included in the draw, I obviously have a number of options to look at.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,869 ✭✭✭Alkers


    They can always say they never received the post entries and you've nothing that proves they did, as unlikely it is that they didn't.

    Can they be hand delivered or sent via registered post?



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    So.......you guys asked for an update........ I've just been allocated (almost) all of the postal entries that I sent in to the company in question, plus they have removed the stipulation that they had on their website that "only 1 entry per household" was permitted, via the postal route, where the prize is a "house, villa or flat".

    I now have well over £1,000 worth of competition tickets, for the price of a few books of 1st class stamps, some postcards ("The Consideration", perhaps!), some black ink and a few hours of my time in completing, posting and "video logging" to create a robust audit trail!!!!

    Mind you, it might have had something to do with the 2 Trust Pilot reviews that I gave them, stating they were possibly breaching ASA Cap Codes by imposing this restriction on entries, via the postal route and the fact that I pointed out that they had confirmed they were applying this restriction in their reply to another Trust Pilot review (for all to see, including the ASA, if they were to be investigated).

    I made it very clear that for them to continue to run their competition with this restriction in place (particularly now that it had been brought to their attention in a public forum which they proactively monitor), would be to "show flagrant disregard for the ASA and its codes".

    The ASA can't impose fines or "send you to Jail", but they can "set" Trading Standards on your company. Also and maybe even more importantly, they can and do, run Ad's in Google Paid search, on FaceBook etc, to appear alongside your own Ad's, warning "that your company engages in marketing that is unethical and breach's the ASA Industry Advertising Codes of practice". They can also notify advertising channels and Media outlets that you are breaching their Codes and warn that they should not accept your advertisements ........essentially they will "hound you" and get you blacklisted from advertising and media channels......without that, these businesses are "dead in the water"!

    Maybe they even saw the posts on here.........who know's, but I'd be sure that the company in question will process (the majority) of postal entries that I make in the future........as regards to ones sent by anyone else..........perhaps employing the methods I have, could work for you, if you have difficulties with getting your Postal entries accepted with any of these company's in the future!

    Post edited by JackDee123 on


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,464 ✭✭✭rodge123


    I only see one recent bad review on trust pilot about them and nothing mentioned about ASA on it?

    Did you email them or contact via Facebook messenger?

    I might start sending in postcards again and email them with similar info you sent!



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123


    Can't be hand delivered and registered post "makes it not a free entry", so under current laws it appears they can disregard those as "breaching terms and conditions of the Postal route for free entry".

    Read back on my previous posts......there is a way to create "extremely robust" evidence that your postal entries were correctly completed, posted in time, were legible and received in time before the closing of a competition. It just takes a bit of extra time and effort.

    Interestingly, I also found a quirk in UK law, called the "Postal Rule" (Google it), which basically means if you can prove you definitely posted your acceptance of a contract, then the other party to that contract is bound by that contract, regardless of it ever reaching them! I'm not sure if there's a similar law that applies in NI or Ireland, but its definitely an interesting one!



  • Registered Users Posts: 21 JackDee123




  • Registered Users Posts: 995 ✭✭✭iColdFusion


    Rkings seems to be on the ropes these days, anyone know whats happening in the background since they got banned from facebook?

    Seems to have been going downhill since they got bought out, odds have been getting worse and worse and they have tried to milk people with the stupid odds instant win draws where hardly any of the top prizes get won, people don't enjoy entering instant loss competitions I guess 😄



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Backlash against gambling in general will hit these fringe operators first i’d say.

    Things are getting tight again, people don’t have €50 to blow on a chance to win a used car that’s been polished and photographed well.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



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  • Registered Users Posts: 628 ✭✭✭Meeoow


    Were they banned from Facebook? I hadn't noticed. I agree though, they seem to have gone downhill lately.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,562 ✭✭✭celt262


    There was a bit of craic the other night with a car draw number 254566 (for example) was the winning number and they called out the wrong name so some lad though he had won a car but they then had to correct it and give it to the rightful winner.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Did that happen again? Happened with another crowd a couple of years ago raffling a tractor. They read out the ‘winner’s name’ which wasn’t even close to the one on screen. Blamed it on the software but that didn’t explain how they’d gotten the name that they’d read out. Complete fix.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users Posts: 995 ✭✭✭iColdFusion


    They seem to be up to all sorts of shenanigans these days, they launched a "win 500quid a week for 4 years" comp recently and it said originally you could also take 100k immediately instead but now after people have bought loads of tickets they have removed the 100k option, sneaky!

    Not sure id want to be banking on them still being in business in 4 years time either...



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Like bookies, casinos etc the only people getting rich out of these competitions are those running them.

    With JP McManus’s donation of his money to GAA clubs maybe we’ll see an end to ‘Win this luxury house in Tarmonbarry’ competitions for the clubs.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,428 ✭✭✭Damokc


    Got it from "a" horse's mouth in Letterkenny that some draws are used to get rid of cars they can't sell....keeps an even flow of stock......



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,428 ✭✭✭Damokc


    Pristine have a Facebook page called pristinecarsIreland. But the link is to their normal UK website. Which states....

    5.Eligibility

    5.1 The competition is only open to all residents in the United Kingdom aged 18 years or over...


    Now a quick look at their pages will see hundreds of ROI residents tagging friends and family in the competitions. I would presume they get hundreds if not thousands of entries from the Rep every week.


    A look over their winners will show only a couple of ROI winners but for small prizes. Impact gun, 1k and a phone.

    All the rest are indeed UK residents.


    Seems a bit underhand with the Facebook name stating Ireland.


    Gonna have a look at all the rest of these crowds T&Cs.


    I'll be back



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,562 ✭✭✭celt262


    Anyone still doing these competitions i see that the odds have gone to the dogs completely.

    Oosch have a 2020 Audi A4 S-Line DSG Facelift Model up at the moment 99c to enter with 99999 Tickets with currently 77424 tickets sold. So even if they only get to 80k sales they are after lifting 40k+ on the draw.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    The house always wins….

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,562 ✭✭✭celt262


    It sure does i wonder if the new gambling legislation will effect these in anyway as it's far from competitions they are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,186 ✭✭✭littlevillage


    Feel sorry for the apprentice carpenters and minimum wage lads who blew 20-30k on this scam over the years....and won nothin.

    A valuable life experience



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    Can’t find another thread on this topic. I’m plagued by ads for Lucky Day Competitions on YouTube. They’re flogging a Spanish villa at the moment. This is their front man. It just screams ‘Trust this man’ when he is pulling these looks and poses in the ad 🙄

    ‘Trust us, we do have a villa to give away. We’ve shot the ad on a farm in Armagh for unrelated reasons. Really.’

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users Posts: 3 FordPerfect


    I won 2 RKings competitions over the years, nothing big, a bicycle and hotel voucher, I definitely lost money over the years.

    A while back they started sending SMS text spam about competitions and I emailed them to immediately take me off their spamming list which they did. Then sometime before Christmas last year they sent more text spam and I immediately told them to close my account.

    I believe it's illegal in Ireland to send gambling text messages without opting in, or the option to opt out.

    In the past I immediately closed an account with McKinney competitions when I had explicitly opted out and they still sent text spam.



  • Registered Users Posts: 328 ✭✭peterofthebr


    Re:lucky day competitions

    I understand it's legit. Based on ticket purchases thry are making a killing on most items.

    I see today they have a massey ferguson 8s.225 and a digger,... I guess it's a bit of a jump going from MF 390 to a MF 8S.. If I won dat I'd be the talk of the country. More then 100 HP then I need but it looks nice (prob would need the digger to widen gaps too), some competitions say today 100 tickets sold of 3000

    tomorrow that might be 870 sold of 3000..so not sure about the accuracy of 'tickets sold'

    Post edited by peterofthebr on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,384 ✭✭✭Rows Grower


    A fella I know won approx 75k euro last year with R Kings, he just won 50k sterling tonight.

    Delighted for him.

    "Very soon we are going to Mars. You wouldn't have been going to Mars if my opponent won, that I can tell you. You wouldn't even be thinking about it."

    Donald Trump, March 13th 2018.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,184 ✭✭✭BlakeS94




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    I have a fantasist friend too. They never win anything that they can show you or no one you know was around when some ‘mad thing’ they are telling you about happened them or the bargain sports car that was sold just before they got there…

    These draws are rigged. They give the small stuff away to avoid scrutiny but all the high value stuff is rigged.
    (Aware I’m becoming a bit obsessed with calling out these scams now so I may leave this thread. Fools have been parted from their money from the year dot, I’m not going to stop it by posting here)

    Post edited by hoodie6029 on

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,184 ✭✭✭BlakeS94


    I don't think Rkings are rigged to be honest.

    They've consistently brought in new measures when people said why aren't ye doing this or doing that, and they've done everything to show they're legit.

    I know plenty of people who have won big, who are definitely not affiliated with anyone in Rkings. Neighbour won an Audi S5, friend of mine won a 335D XDrive. Neither are small prizes.

    Maybe other competition crowds are rigged, but I really don't think Rkings are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,384 ✭✭✭Rows Grower


    I have no reason to make up a story about some "mad thing" and have no understanding why you would think I do.

    My mistake, it was actually 2021 when my friend won the first time, it was 70k worth of cars and stuff. Last night he bought 5 x £2 tickets 20 minutes before the 9pm draw and won the only prize on offer. It works out about 59k euro.

    "Very soon we are going to Mars. You wouldn't have been going to Mars if my opponent won, that I can tell you. You wouldn't even be thinking about it."

    Donald Trump, March 13th 2018.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,069 ✭✭✭hoodie6029


    They were examples of the behaviours of fantasists in general, not you.
    I’ve seen enough scams to know one when I see it. Someone along the line is getting shafted to make these raffles happen and you can be certain that it’s not and never will be the crowd running it. That’s why these things are best avoided.

    This is water. Inspiring speech by David Foster Wallace https://youtu.be/DCbGM4mqEVw?si=GS5uDvegp6Er1EOG



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