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Cookie Policy

Posted: June 2026.

Quick, genuine rundown of how this website (the "Site") – covering Gates of Olympus from Pragmatic Play and the casinos that offer it – uses cookies and similar tech. Pair this with our Privacy Policy for the fuller picture of how we handle data generally.

We've tried to make this something you'd actually finish reading rather than a copy-paste legal block. Keep browsing after our cookie banner shows up, without changing anything, and that counts as accepting non-essential cookies as described here. Strictly necessary ones run regardless, since the Site genuinely doesn't work without them.

Cookies do a narrow job on this Site: keeping pages working properly, showing us which Gates of Olympus content people actually find useful, and letting us get credit when a visit turns into a casino signup. None of that means knowing who you are personally, and that principle shapes everything about how we've set this up.

// What a Cookie Even Is

A cookie is a tiny text file a website drops on your device when you visit. Your browser keeps hold of it and sends it back on later visits, which is how a site remembers you’ve been there before or recalls a preference you set previously. Cookies just store information – no programs running, no malware hiding inside, nothing beyond a small piece of data. We also use similar tech like pixel tags and local browser storage, all lumped under “cookies” in this Notice unless we say otherwise.

// The Four Types We Rely On

Necessary ones. Keep the lights on – navigation, security, core display logic. No consent needed, can’t be switched off through our tool, though blocking them at the browser level can break things.

Analytics cookies. Show us how people use our Gates of Olympus content – what gets read about the tumble feature or free spins, how long people stick around, where they came from. All aggregated, nothing personal in any of it.

Affiliate tracking. Kick in when you click through to a casino offering Gates of Olympus, logging that the click started here so we get credit if it leads to a signup. Just a click and a timestamp, nothing more than that.

Preference cookies. Remember your cookie choices and display settings so the Site feels the same every time you’re back.

What Happens When That Banner Pops Up

First visit, you get three choices: accept everything non-essential, reject everything non-essential, or dig into detailed settings category by category. Keep scrolling without picking one, and we only set the strictly necessary stuff – silence doesn’t count as a yes for analytics or affiliate tracking.

Whatever you pick gets saved in a preference cookie so the banner doesn’t hassle you every page load. Wipe that cookie, and we lose track of your choice, so the banner shows up again next time around.

// Cookies From Outside Providers

A few cookies here come from tools we’ve plugged in, mostly Google Analytics, which runs under its own privacy rules (policies.google.com). We don’t allow ad networks or data brokers anywhere near this Site, and nothing here is set up for retargeting you elsewhere afterward.

Once you click through to an actual casino, whatever cookies they set are entirely their business, governed by their own policies – not ours in any way.

What We Genuinely Can’t See After That

Worth being upfront about the limits here. We don’t have a dashboard, a log, or any technical way to see your account, your balance, or what you’re actually doing on a casino’s platform. The cookie’s job ends the moment you land there. Everything that happens afterward is invisible to us unless a commission report eventually comes back through the affiliate network.

// How Long These Things Stick Around

Session cookies disappear the second you close your browser.

Persistent cookies hang around for whatever duration is listed in the Section 3 table, or until you manually clear them.

// Taking Charge of Your Cookies

A few ways to handle this: our on-site preference tool, which shows up on your first visit and stays accessible afterward; your browser’s own cookie settings, letting you block or wipe things outright; or Google’s opt-out add-on at tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout if you’d rather not be tracked by Analytics anywhere online.

Each browser does this slightly differently – Chrome under Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies and other site data; Firefox under Settings → Privacy & Security; Safari under Preferences → Privacy; Edge under Settings → Cookies and site permissions.

Turning off non-essential cookies won’t stop you reading anything here, though it might limit personalization and mess with how accurately we can credit referrals. Block everything, including the necessary stuff, and you risk the consent banner getting stuck in a loop, popping up every single visit.

If You Block Absolutely Everything

Blocking every cookie at the browser level, necessary ones too, can make parts of this Site act strangely. Even the consent tool needs a cookie to remember what you picked, so total blocking can leave that banner reappearing forever. Managing non-essential categories through our own preference panel usually works better than an all-or-nothing browser block, since it’s more precise and avoids those particular side effects.

// Where Cookies Become Personal Data

If a cookie ends up processing something that counts as personal data, our Privacy Policy takes over from there – legal basis, retention, your rights, all of it. Analytics cookies strip identifying detail from IP addresses before storing anything; affiliate cookies track a click, not a person.

// "Do Not Track" Browser Signals

Some browsers can send a Do Not Track signal. There’s no agreed standard for how sites should react to it, and we don’t currently change anything based on that signal. Section 6’s tools are the more reliable way to actually manage this.

// When We Update This

We revisit and revise this Notice as our cookie setup changes, posting whatever’s current here with a fresh date.

// Reach Out

Cookie questions? Use the contact form and we’ll get back to you.