Tournament Structure and Entry Mechanics
yumetoto Tournament Mode operates as a scheduled event system. Each tournament has a lobby listing that shows the game type, entry fee, player cap, start date and time, duration, and current registration count. You select a tournament, review its rules, and confirm entry. Your entry fee is deducted from your account balance immediately—your tournament chip stack is separate from your cash account, so tournament play does not affect your regular balance.
Most yumetoto tournaments run on a fixed schedule: daily tournaments (morning, afternoon, evening slots), weekly tournaments (weekend specialty events), and monthly tournaments (higher entry fees, larger prize pools). Each tournament displays a countdown timer showing time until start. Registration typically closes subject to verification before the tournament begins. Once the start time arrives, the tournament is locked and play commences simultaneously for all registered players.
Player capacity varies by tournament size. Small tournaments cap at 10–20 players; mid-size events run 50–100 players; large tournaments accept 500+ participants. When a tournament fills, the lobby shows "Tournament full" and additional registrations are queued for a waitlist. If a registered player does not join within subject to verification of start time, they are removed and their entry fee is refunded.
Tournament play consolidates player skill and consistency over a defined window, making leaderboard positions more meaningful than isolated hand results.
Entry Fees and Prize Pools
Entry fees on yumetoto tournaments range from our welcome offer (micro-stakes tournaments) to our welcome offer+ (championship events). Each tournament listing clearly states the entry fee and prize pool structure. Prize pools are typically calculated as total entry fees collected minus a house rake—commonly 5–non-specific info depending on tournament tier. The remaining amount is distributed to top-finishing players according to published payout tables.
Standard payout distribution awards the top non-specific info of finishers. First place receives a percentage of the pool; second place a smaller percentage; third place smaller still. Outside the top non-specific info, finishing players typically receive their entry fee back or a small consolation amount. Players who bust out early receive nothing beyond their initial entry fee expenditure. Payouts are automatically calculated and credited to your account within minutes of tournament conclusion.
Some yumetoto tournaments offer guaranteed minimum prize pools—stated as "Guaranteed our welcome offer" or similar. If the entry-fee-based pool falls short of the guaranteed amount due to low registration, yumetoto covers the shortfall. Guaranteed tournaments typically charge slightly higher rake to fund this guarantee. Promotion tournaments occasionally run at zero rake or with house-funded prize pools to attract participation.
Leaderboard Ranking and Settlement
Rankings in yumetoto tournaments depend on game type. Blackjack and baccarat tournaments typically rank by chip stack—highest chip count at tournament end ranks first. Roulette tournaments may rank by win ratio (percentage of winning spins) or total payout. Dragon Tiger and Sic Bo tournaments often use hybrid metrics: chip stack plus win consistency. The tournament lobby displays the ranking metric prominently before registration.
The leaderboard updates in real time during tournament play. You can view your current position, chip count, and standing rank anytime. Final standings are locked at the tournament end time, and payouts are calculated immediately. Your account balance is updated within seconds, and a settlement summary is sent to your registered email showing your final position and payout amount.
If you finish outside the paid places, your settlement confirmation simply notes your final rank and entry fee deduction. No additional action is required—your account is already updated. If you finish in a paid position, the same settlement email shows your payout amount and the exact breakdown of prize-pool allocation.
Tournament Types and Game Rules
Blackjack tournaments on yumetoto use a simplified chip-stack format: you play hands against the dealer, and each win increases your chip count; each loss decreases it. Your goal is to finish with the highest chip stack relative to other tournament players. Dealer rules are standard: hits on 16, stands on 17. Blackjack (ace + ten-value card) pays 3-to-2 and counts as a ranking advantage during the final chip tally.
Roulette tournaments operate as spin-based competitions. You are allocated tournament chips, place bets on a shared roulette wheel, and try to grow your stack faster than competitors. Each spin result applies to all active tournament players simultaneously—no individual wheels. Rankings reflect which players have accumulated the most chips after the tournament's designated spin count ends.
Baccarat tournaments rank by chip accumulation across player-banker-tie outcomes. You predict shoe outcomes, commit chips to your prediction, and settle wins or losses. Higher chip stacks after the shoe completes rank higher. Some baccarat tournaments run multiple shoes, with chip carry-over between rounds to create a multi-round leaderboard.
Key takeaways
- Tournaments are scheduled events with fixed entry fees, start times, and player caps
- Entry fees range from our welcome offer (micro) to our welcome offer+ (championship)
- Prize pools are entry fees minus 5–non-specific info rake, distributed to top-finishing players
- Leaderboard rankings are determined by chip stack, win ratio, or hye-walletd metrics depending on game
- Payouts are credited automatically within minutes of tournament end
Deposit, Withdrawal, and Tournament Account Management
Your yumetoto account balance covers both regular play and tournament entries. Deposit via mobile banking, local payment, online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment, online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking, or local payment—your balance is instantly available for any game, including tournament registration. When you enter a tournament, the entry fee is deducted from your main balance and converted to tournament chips. When the tournament concludes, any payout is credited back to your main balance.
Withdrawals from your account are unrestricted whether you are active in a tournament or not. If you request a withdrawal while a tournament is running, the withdrawal processes from your available balance (excluding active tournament chips). Once the tournament completes, all chips and payouts are returned to your main balance, and you can withdraw that amount immediately. No holding period, no waiting time.
Your account must pass identity verification before any tournament entry or withdrawal is enabled. The verification process requires email confirmation, national ID (KTP), and optional address proof. Once verified, you can register for tournaments at any time. Tournament registration does not require additional verification beyond your initial account setup.
During peak seasons—Liga 1 matchdays, Piala AFF windows, Idul Fitri, Idul Adha, Imlek, or Nyepi holidays—yumetoto adds extra tournament schedules. Evening tournaments in Jakarta, afternoon events in Surabaya, and morning slots in Bandung, Medan, and Semarang are common during these periods. Plan your tournament entries around your time zone and preferred play windows.
Tournament Conduct and Dispute Resolution
All tournament players on yumetoto must follow standard fair-play conduct. Collusion (coordinating with other players to manipulate outcomes), bot usage, and cheating result in disqualification and account suspension. Disputes about settlement or ranking are reviewed by our operations team within 24 hours. If an error is found, the settlement is corrected and your account is credited or debited accordingly.
If you encounter a technical issue during a tournament—such as a disconnection, a missing hand, or a system crash—report it immediately through the in-app chat. Our support team will assess the issue and may pause the tournament or re-run the affected round if necessary. yumetoto does not replay entire tournaments for individual player issues, but critical system errors that affect multiple players may trigger tournament cancellation and full refund of entry fees.
