burger icon

About the Author - Your Independent AU Casino Expert at Razed-Casino-Australia

I'm Eliza Kavanagh, an independent gambling reviewer and the lead casino analyst for razedbet-au.com. I spend most of my time digging into offshore and crypto-first casinos that actually let Australians sign up, and then explaining what they're really like once you log in from Sydney, Melbourne, Brissie or anywhere else across the country. That includes detailed, regulation-aware reviews of brands like razed-casino-australia as they appear on razedbet-au.com, rather than just copying the glossy marketing lines you see on their homepages.

I've spent the last four years watching offshore crypto casinos pretty closely. Testing the sites, poking at the terms, and trying to turn all the legalese into plain English so you can see the risks and the upsides before you put any money in. Sometimes that means flagging serious red flags; sometimes it's just pointing out small quirks that might annoy you later. Either way, my aim is for you to know what you're walking into before you create an account.

My pic

1. Professional Identification

I work full-time as a casino blogger and gambling analyst, with a particular focus on offshore and crypto casinos that sit in a legal grey area for Australians. Day to day at razedbet-au.com, I plan and write our long-form reviews, double-check key resources like our deep dive into bonuses & promotions for Australians and our practical guides to payment methods that actually work for AU players, and keep an eye on every regulatory change that might affect access to sites such as Razed Casino.

Because I'm based in New South Wales, I see new ACMA announcements, DNS blocks, and bank-level gambling restrictions as they turn up in local news and in people's social feeds. That perspective filters straight into my work. I don't write from a vague "global player" point of view; I write as someone who understands what it's like to have your favourite casino suddenly blocked by ACMA, or to have your bank knock back a card deposit without explaining why.

When I review brands like razed-casino-australia for razedbet-au.com, I'm not only checking how slick the lobby looks or how big the welcome bonus appears on the homepage. I'm checking how the site behaves when you log in from an Australian IP, what happens when ACMA blocks one of its domains, how quickly support answers in our time zones, and whether the crypto-only setup still makes sense once you factor in exchange fees, blockchain delays and price swings. Those practical observations make their way into the pros, cons and warnings you see throughout the site.

2. Expertise and Credentials

Before I ever wrote about casinos, I spent several years around statistics, probability and risk analysis. That naturally led me towards online gambling, where concepts like RTP, volatility, house edge and random number generators matter just as much as how many games are on offer or how attractive a site looks on your phone.

Over the last four years as an independent gambling reviewer, I've:

  • Profiled dozens of offshore casino operators, including Curaçao-licensed brands that share a similar structure and licensing setup to razed-casino-australia, and checked their details against official public registers instead of just trusting whatever is written in the footer.
  • Specialised in crypto casino payments for Australians, testing how stablecoins, BTC, ETH and LTC work for deposits, withdrawals and bonuses, and comparing those to more traditional e-wallet or prepaid options at times when banks refuse direct gambling payments.
  • Built a consistent review checklist that looks at licensing, responsible gambling tools, payout reliability, game fairness, withdrawal friction, KYC demands and dispute handling, so each new review is measured against the same standards rather than gut feeling alone.

I regularly read and reference material from the Curaçao Gaming Control Board and the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), and I check what they publish against what players actually experience. Whenever I talk about licensing or blocking, I want you to be able to follow the trail to a real regulator, not a rumour in a forum thread.

Although I don't hold formal gambling industry certifications, I take regular short courses and attend workshops on responsible gambling, harm minimisation, online privacy and data security. I base a lot of my approach on the guidance from Gambling Help Online and similar Australian services, especially around early warning signs and how to set up limits or exclusions if gambling starts to feel like a problem.

In my reviews, I make a point of naming the regulator behind a licence (for example, a Curaçao licence OGL/2024/1670/0964, issued to Pretense B.V. for Razed Casino according to the Curaçao regulator's site as of early 2026), and I explain what that means for Australians in real life. Playing at an offshore site with no Australian licence has consequences: if something goes wrong, there's usually no local watchdog to lean on, and chargebacks or complaints can be much tougher to pursue. I spell that out rather than glossing over it.

3. Specialisation Areas

Over time, I've realised my work is most helpful when I'm unpacking the overlap between games, payments and law. That's where most of the confusion and risk lives for Aussies using offshore and crypto-first casinos, so that's where I put most of my energy.

Game categories I focus on include:

  • Online pokies and pokies-style crypto slots with themes that feel familiar to Australian players, often with high volatility and features like hold-and-spin or paid feature buys that can chew through a balance quickly if you're not careful.
  • RNG table games (blackjack, roulette, baccarat) where the house edge quietly shifts depending on rules, such as how many decks are in play, whether the dealer hits or stands on soft 17, and which tempting side bets are really just traps.
  • Live dealer platforms and studios, paying attention to bet limits, how they treat disconnections, what happens when there's a dealer error, and how stable the streams are during peak evening hours in Australian time zones.

Because I'm writing for Australians, I also keep a close eye on:

  • Australian online gambling laws and how the Interactive Gambling Act applies to offshore sites - what's banned for operators, what's more of a grey area for players, and how that plays out in practice rather than just on paper.
  • ACMA DNS and IP blocking, mirror domains and the practical fallout when a casino like Razed shifts from one URL to another. I test whether those new links work properly from Australia and whether they're genuine mirrors or riskier clones.
  • The real-world risks of VPN use for online gambling in Australia, such as breaching terms and conditions, having withdrawals frozen while the casino "investigates" location issues, or losing access to your account if the operator decides you've broken its rules.

Another big part of my work is bonus and payment analysis. I pull apart welcome bonuses, reloads, cashbacks and VIP perks, then match them against wagering requirements, max bet limits, restricted games and time limits. The idea is to help you see, at a glance, which offers you might realistically clear and which are more like long shots or just marketing noise.

When I write about payments, I'm typically explaining how Australians can use crypto instead of direct AUD banking, and what that shift means. That includes blockchain fees, exchange spreads, price swings between depositing and withdrawing, and the fact that crypto payments don't have the same chargeback options you might expect from a credit card. I also talk about common headaches, such as exchanges asking for extra ID, banks flagging transfers to exchanges, or casinos suddenly changing withdrawal rules.

On the software side, I track which game providers and aggregators keep showing up across the offshore market, from big-name studios to smaller niche developers. I test how their games run on mobile-first casino layouts that Australians actually use: cheaper Androids, older iPhones, tablets on the couch, and sometimes patchy home internet. If a game lags or crashes on those setups, I mention it.

4. Achievements and Publications

Since joining razedbet-au.com, I've written and edited dozens of in-depth reviews and practical guides aimed squarely at Australian readers who are considering offshore or crypto casinos. I don't think of these pieces as "trophies"; I care more about whether they help someone decide, with a clear head, whether a site is worth their time and money - or whether they're better off walking away.

Some of the work I'm proudest of here includes:

  • A detailed look at how Razed Casino's Curaçao licence and crypto-first setup actually play out for Australians, step by step from registration to cashing out, including what options you do and don't have if there's a dispute and no local regulator in the picture.
  • Our comprehensive guide to payment methods for Australians at offshore casinos, where I lay out crypto, e-wallet and alternative payment paths side by side, with real-world pros and cons based on how people in Australia usually move money in and out.
  • Practical advice woven into our bonuses & promotions coverage for AU players, pointing out which offers are fair enough for casual play and which ones are weighed down by high wagering, very short expiry times or tight game restrictions.

My name appears on more than 50 casino-related pieces across the site: brand reviews, safety explainers, features on access and VPN use, and articles about responsible gambling in an offshore context. By the time you hit the last line of a review, you should have that gut sense of, "Yeah, this suits me" or "Nope, not worth the hassle." That's what I'm aiming for, even if that gut feeling tells you not to play at all.

I keep older content alive too. When ACMA blocks another domain, when an operator tweaks its bonus rules without much fanfare, or when a once-simple crypto payment path starts sending Australian users through more hoops, I go back and update the relevant pieces. I'd rather admit something has changed than leave you reading advice that no longer matches reality.

5. Mission and Values

On the surface, gambling looks light and bright: colourful pokie reels, big win animations, loyalty schemes, sports sponsorships. But for a lot of people it turns into a money and wellbeing issue very quickly. That puts this topic firmly in the "your money or your life" basket, and I try to write with that in mind instead of treating it like a harmless hobby for everyone.

My mission is to:

  • Publish unbiased, honest reviews that clearly separate hard facts (licence info, payout speeds, fees, blocked domains) from my own opinions (for example, whether a site feels cluttered or whether the game mix is interesting).
  • Put player interests first by laying out both the appealing bits and the risks of using offshore casinos like razed-casino-australia as featured on razedbet-au.com. That includes spelling out that these casinos don't have an Australian licence and aren't covered by local consumer protections.
  • Support responsible gambling in every review by pointing readers towards our wider responsible gaming resources and external help like Gambling Help Online (1800 858 858) if gambling isn't feeling fun anymore or is starting to cause stress.
  • Be open about affiliate relationships. If a link might earn razedbet-au.com a commission when you sign up or deposit, that doesn't give a free pass to any operator. I still call out slow payouts, confusing rules, or worrying behaviour whenever it shows up.
  • Keep up a habit of regular fact-checking. When operators change their terms, add or remove games, alter bonus structures or when ACMA adds new domains to its blocking register, I revisit and correct affected content so you aren't relying on stale information.

For Australians in particular, I see my work as a way to give clearer player protection and legal context. I won't tell you that any casino is "safe money", and I won't suggest gambling as a way to solve financial problems. What I can do is lay out the rules, the practical risks and the likely friction points so you can decide whether gambling fits into your life at all, and if so, how tightly you want to control it.

One message runs through almost everything I write: casino games are entertainment with a real cost, not a job or an investment. Over the long run, the maths favours the house. If you decide to play, it should be with spare money you can afford to lose, like you'd set aside for a night out or a gig, not with rent, mortgage, bill or savings money you're counting on.

6. Regional Expertise - Focus on Australia

Living and working in New South Wales means I'm right in the middle of the Australian gambling environment. That ranges from pokies in local pubs and clubs, to Cup Day office sweeps, to people casually showing each other multi bets on their phones, and the separate, quieter trend of players heading to offshore crypto casinos as local products are tightened or blocked.

My AU-focused work covers:

  • Keeping track of ACMA enforcement actions, including DNS blocks that affect access to Razed's different domains and mirrors, and then explaining what it actually means for you if a familiar URL suddenly times out or redirects.
  • Spelling out the impact of there being no Australian licence for sites like Razed, including what that means for complaints, refunds and who - if anyone - is officially on your side if a casino doesn't pay.
  • Describing local banking realities, such as card declines, blanket gambling blocks, and added scrutiny on transfers to crypto exchanges, and how that nudges some Aussies towards crypto or other alternative payment paths to keep playing.
  • Reflecting Australian player habits, from a love of high-volatility pokies and jackpots to quick mobile sessions on the lounge in front of the footy, and a strong preference for fast, straightforward withdrawals once people decide to cash out.

Over time, I've built up a small web of local contacts and trusted resources - from consumer advice services to legal explainers and Australian gambling support organisations. I lean on those when I'm checking grey areas like tax treatment, reporting obligations or new regulatory proposals, so I'm not just guessing or repeating overseas assumptions.

Because razedbet-au.com has readers from all over the country, I also pay attention to how things differ between states and territories when it matters. Venue rules, self-exclusion schemes and attitudes to gambling ads can look very different in NSW compared to Victoria, Queensland or WA, even though offshore casinos sit outside those local licensing systems.

7. Personal Touch

My own gambling is intentionally low-stakes and fairly rare, and keeping it that way helps me write from a clearer place. When I test a new site, I usually deposit a small amount, head to a few popular pokie titles that Aussie players will recognise, and focus less on chasing wins and more on how the platform handles deposits, limits and withdrawals.

If I run into slow or confusing verification steps, bonus rules that don't line up with what was advertised, or support agents who dodge basic questions, I take note. If things run smoothly and the site makes it easy to set deposit limits or cool-off periods, I note that too. Those gut reactions sit alongside the hard data in my reviews to give you a fuller picture.

On a personal level, I've seen how quickly gambling can swing from a lighthearted hobby to something that quietly eats into savings or creates tension at home. That history shapes the way I write: I'll enjoy a well-designed pokie or a polished live table, but I'll also keep repeating that gambling is high-risk entertainment, not a side hustle or "extra income". If you notice yourself chasing losses, hiding your play, or feeling anxious and stuck, that's usually a sign to step away and talk to someone, not to double down.

8. Work Examples on razedbet-au.com

If you'd like to see how all this plays out in actual articles, you'll find my name on many of the core pages and reviews around the site. For instance:

  • The main homepage overview of Razed Casino for Australians, where I sum up the basics on licensing, access issues and safety and link to more detailed sections if you want to dig deeper into any particular aspect.
  • The long-form look at bonus offers and promotions for AU players, where I walk through wagering rules, game contributions, maximum bets and realistic approaches to clearing (or deciding not to bother with) certain deals.
  • The practical guide to payment methods for offshore casinos, which explains how Australians can use crypto, e-wallets and other non-AUD paths, what fees and waits to expect, and where withdrawal terms often catch people out.
  • The review of mobile apps and mobile browser play, where I look at how Razed and similar casinos run on phones and tablets for Australian bettors, including navigation, load times and where key features sit on smaller screens.
  • The dedicated page on responsible gaming tools and support, where I list the in-casino tools available and explain how to contact Australian help services if gambling is putting pressure on your life.

Across these articles and more than 50 pieces overall on razedbet-au.com, the aim stays the same: provide clear, detailed, locally relevant information so Australian readers can make up their own minds with everything out on the table. I routinely revisit older reviews for brands like razed-casino-australia when terms, payment options, bonuses, game providers or regulatory conditions change, so the picture you're seeing is as current as possible.

If you want to read more about how I approach reviews and updates, you can always find your way back to this page through the about the author section. You can also scan through common questions in our site-wide faq, where I answer recurring queries about offshore legality, payout reliability, VPNs and basic safety steps for Aussies who still decide to play online.

9. Contact Information

I think accessibility and transparency matter a lot when you're talking about gambling, especially offshore gambling. If you have questions about something I've written, spot a mistake, or have an idea for a guide that might help other Australian players, you can reach me via the site's contact us form. I don't offer personal betting advice or chase up individual disputes with casinos, but I do take reader feedback seriously when I'm updating articles or deciding what to tackle next.

Every genuine message gets read, and I make corrections when new, solid information comes through. If I significantly change a recommendation or adjust a key claim, that's usually because of something concrete like updated regulator data, a pattern of player reports, or a shift in how an operator is handling payouts or complaints.

Last updated: February 2026. This page reflects my independent analysis and opinions as an Australian casino reviewer and does not represent an official statement from Razed Casino or any other gambling operator. All content on razedbet-au.com is provided as information and commentary, not as financial or legal advice. Casino games involve high risk and should always be treated as paid entertainment, not a reliable way to earn money.