Editorial · cross-topic
Roles, responsibilities, review chain · not a bios page

Editors

Seven editorial roles cover this site. This page lists each role, who it covers, and how the review chain ties to our editorial policy and corrections process. There are no real names, no fake credentials, no team-photo theatre — just the role definitions and the trust contract behind them.

Roles, not biosPage-type-awareReview chain
On this page
  1. Why pseudonyms
  2. The roles in use
  3. Which role covers which page type
  4. Review chain
  5. What this page is not

Why pseudonyms

Several team members continue to work in iGaming compliance, payments or regulatory-adjacent roles where a public byline on this kind of content would create conflict-of-interest problems with their day jobs. We use stable pseudonyms because of that.

The pseudonyms aren't anonymous-account placeholders we swap around. They are stable: J. Tremblay on a page in 2026 is the same person as J. Tremblay on a page next year. The pseudonym maps to a defined role, and the role maps to the page types we sign that name to. That's the trust contract.

You don't have to trust the pseudonyms. We can't ask you to. What you can verify directly: every page links the third-party sources we paraphrased, every claim about a public surface (a Play Store listing, a Coinbase listing, a regulator registry) you can confirm in a few clicks. If those check out, the editorial framing on top is what it is.

The roles in use

Seven editorial roles cover the site. The pseudonym, the role, and what the role owns:

PseudonymRoleOwns
J. TremblayEditorial LeadFinal sign-off on most pages, voice consistency, structural decisions, page taxonomy.
M. OkonkwoCanadian EditorPages that touch Canadian-specific context — provincial public sources, payment networks, federal-level information.
M. OkonkwoReview EditorThe Jetton review specifically — scorecard, verdict pages, comparison framing.
S. DuboisResponsible Gambling LeadThe responsible-gambling page; signs off on anything with behavioural-risk implications.
A. ChenCrypto & Payments EditorTON ecosystem, JETTON token, Jeton wallet payment flows, on-chain mechanics, login / app surfaces.
L. BouchardCasino Overview EditorBrand-and-product overview pages where the page type is descriptive rather than verdict-oriented.
R. CôtéOntario Routing Editor / Canada Routing EditorSERP-routing pages for Ontario- and Canada-level intents.

One person can hold more than one role on this site — the role describes the kind of judgement applied to a page, not the headcount.

Which role covers which page type

The role on a page is set by the page type, not the topic. So a Canadian-context note inside a Jetton page is signed by the Canadian Editor; a verdict on the same brand is signed by the Review Editor. Mapping:

Page typeReviewer roleExamples
Brand / product overviewCasino Overview EditorJetton casino
Editorial verdict / scorecardReview EditorJetton review
Ontario-facing SERP routingOntario Routing EditorJetton in Ontario
Canada-level SERP routingCanada Routing EditorJetton in Canada
Crypto / wallet / payment flowsCrypto & Payments EditorJetton appJetton loginJetton bonus
Canadian-context utilityCanadian EditorJeton casinos in Canada
Editorial-Lead-signed (default)Editorial LeadJetton online casinoJeton casino sites
Responsible-gambling contentResponsible Gambling LeadResponsible gambling

Review chain

Each content page carries a Reviewed by line naming the editor that signed it off and the review date. That sign-off is what the byline on a page means.

  • Drafting. A page is drafted by the editor whose role matches its page type.
  • Review. Where the page touches more than one role's territory, the second role reads the relevant section.
  • Editorial Lead sign-off. Most pages are signed off by the Editorial Lead before publish, for voice consistency and to catch structural issues.
  • Update cycle. Pages are reviewed at least every quarter; pages tied to fast-moving topics (cashier methods, current bonus offers) are reviewed more often.
  • Corrections. If a substantive claim changes, the change is logged on the About page's corrections section, with the date and a one-line description of what changed.

The methodology behind a verdict (scorecard pages specifically) is on Review methodology; the editorial standards that apply to every page are on Editorial policy; the contact channel for editor messages is on Contact.

What this page is not

This page does not list real names, photos, qualifications, awards or social handles. Several team members work in adjacent professional roles where attaching their real identity to this content would create conflicts.

It is also not a marketing surface. There are no testimonials, no “years of combined experience” numbers, no “as seen in” badges. The pseudonyms, the page-type mapping, and the corrections log on the About page are the trust signals we publish. If those aren't enough for your use case, the third-party sources cited on each page are designed to let you verify the substantive claims independently, regardless of what you make of the byline.

Frequently asked questions

Are these real people or content-mill personas?

Real people behind stable pseudonyms. Each pseudonym maps to one person across the whole site over time. We use pseudonyms because team members work in iGaming-adjacent roles where a public byline would create conflicts — we treat that as a real constraint, not a marketing gimmick.

Why does one person hold two roles on this page?

Because role describes the kind of judgement applied to a page type, not headcount. A small editorial team is more honest than fabricating a larger one. M. Okonkwo signs Canadian-context utility pages as Canadian Editor and signs the Jetton review specifically as Review Editor — same person, different role definition because the page type is different.

Where do I see who signed off a specific page?

Every content page carries a Reviewed by line in the byline area, naming the editor and the date. That name maps to the table on this page. The corrections log on About shows what was changed, when, and by whom — substantive changes only.