Twitch Streamer and NFT Founder DNP3 Admits to Gambling Away Investor Funds
His projects, including The Goobers NFT and charity-focused cryptocurrency CluCoin, were down following the announcement.

Twitch streamer DNP3, which founded several crypto projects including The Goobers NFT, metaverse platform Gridcraft Network and charity-focused cryptocurrency CluCoin, admitted to gambling away investor funds on Tuesday.
In a statement posted to Twitter, the founder said he had become "incredibly addicted to gambling."
I’m sorry.
— ⚫️ (@DNPthree) January 3, 2023
Read: https://t.co/RKM1wYggnC
"Every dollar I could find I would put into [crypto casino] Stake in hopes of winning big," he wrote. "Even when the big wins did happen it wasn’t enough. Eventually, I lost everything. In addition to my own life savings, I also irresponsibly used investor funds to try and 'get my money back' from the casino, which was wrong for so many reasons."
"I am now completely broke both financially and spiritually. My sense of trust in myself is compromised," he added, saying that he was working with a help group to begin a "path to recovery."
It's unclear how much money has been lost. The price of CluCoin plummeted by 63% following the announcement, while The Goobers project saw its market cap dip by 9%. According to OpenSea, The Goobers has done 968 ETH in total sales volume, or roughly $1.1 million.
The news recalled other crypto projects, including NFT launchpad Onepad, that were forced to shutter after its founder gambled away funds.
More For You
The hardware hurdle: Cysic and Cardano clash over the future of decentralized compute

At Consensus Hong Kong 2026, Leo Fan questioned Midnight’s use of Google Cloud and Azure, as Charles Hoskinson justifies hyperscaler partnerships.
What to know:
- At Consensus Hong Kong 2026, Cysic founder Leo Fan warned that blockchain projects relying heavily on hyperscalers like Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure risk recreating single points of failure that undermine crypto’s decentralization ethos.
- Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson defended partnerships with major cloud providers for the Midnight privacy-focused network, arguing that global, privacy-preserving systems require hyperscaler-level compute while cryptography and confidential computing protect underlying data.
- The debate between Hoskinson and Fan centers on how to define decentralization, with Hoskinson prioritizing cryptographic neutrality over hardware ownership and Fan urging a hybrid model that limits reliance on Big Tech and extends decentralization to the compute layer itself.










