Sports betting in the United States has changed dramatically since the repeal of PASPA in 2018. New sportsbooks have flooded legal markets, state-by-state regulations continue to evolve, and everyday bettors are navigating a landscape that is more complex than ever. Our platform exists to cut through that complexity and give American bettors the honest, well-researched guidance they actually need.
This is not a site built around hype or promotional fluff. Every review, guide, and breakdown published here goes through a structured editorial process designed to prioritize accuracy over convenience and reader value over anything else.
Leading our content operation is Adrienne Kowalczyk, a sports betting analyst and editor with over 11 years of hands-on experience in the iGaming industry. Adrienne got her start writing odds breakdowns and game previews for a major sports media platform before moving into editorial leadership roles across several well-regarded gambling industry outlets.
Her expertise covers NFL and NBA betting markets, prop wagering strategy, and the legal evolution of sports betting across American states. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism with a minor in statistics, a combination that shapes her approach to content: data-informed, but always readable. As lead editor, Adrienne sets the standards for every piece published on this platform.
Beyond Adrienne, our broader team includes analysts and reviewers who bring their own specializations to the table. Collectively, the group covers everything from line movement and handicapping fundamentals to mobile sportsbook usability and bonus term evaluation.
Our core work is evaluating US-facing sportsbooks honestly and consistently. That means signing up for platforms ourselves, testing the features bettors actually use, checking how odds compare across markets, and reading the fine print so our readers do not have to.
We cover the full range of sports betting content: sportsbook reviews, state-by-state legal guides, betting strategy primers, and market-specific breakdowns. Whether a bettor is placing their first NFL spread wager or digging into same-game parlay construction, we aim to have something useful for them.
Honesty about how we operate matters to us. This platform generates revenue through affiliate partnerships with sportsbook operators. When readers sign up through our links, we may receive a commission. We want to be upfront about that.
At the same time, our editorial team works to ensure that commercial relationships do not dictate how platforms are assessed. Sportsbooks are evaluated on their actual merits, and our reviewers flag weaknesses and limitations just as readily as they highlight strengths. Our goal is to give bettors an accurate picture so they can make informed decisions, not to steer them toward whoever offers the largest referral fee.
Content is reviewed and updated on a regular basis. The US sports betting market moves quickly, and outdated information does a disservice to the readers relying on it. Keeping things current is a core part of the editorial commitment here.
Sports betting involves real money and real decisions. A misleading sportsbook review or an inaccurate breakdown of bonus terms can cost a bettor real dollars. That reality keeps our team accountable in a way that general content work simply does not.
We take seriously the responsibility that comes with operating in this space. Our reviewers do not publish assessments they cannot support, our editors push back on anything that feels overstated, and our process is built to catch errors before they reach readers.
The US sports betting landscape is unlike any other. State-level regulation means the sportsbooks available in Ohio are not the same as those available in Colorado. Licensing standards, tax rules, and market maturity vary widely. Our content is built with that reality in mind.
We write for bettors who understand their local context and want guidance that reflects it. That means covering the operators actually available to US players, referencing the legal frameworks that govern them, and acknowledging the differences between markets rather than treating the country as a single uniform audience.