


Tournaments here work as a competition layer rather than as a simple extra bonus. The main difference is structural: rankings, points, and reward thresholds matter as much as the reward itself.
The strongest signals are already concrete. No extra entry fee is described, real-money activity drives the leaderboard, and the Weekly League uses exact scoring rules: each $1.5 bet equals 1 point, while each $1.5 deposit equals 30 points.
This page stays on tournament groups, leaderboard logic, coins, Bonus Crab Spin, and reward crediting. Sports coverage, standard bonus families, and payment detail only matter here when they help explain what tournaments are not.
The competition side of Wazamba is built into normal account activity, not into a separate paid entry product. The key point is that tournaments do not need an extra entry fee, and Weekly League entry is described as automatic once qualifying play begins.
Real-money bets drive rankings, which makes the system closer to an ongoing competitive layer than to a one-off promotional screen. That also explains why tournament logic belongs on its own page: it follows activity, points, and thresholds rather than one simple balance credit.
The confirmed group structure is already broad enough to matter. Tournament groups include Live Casino, Pokies, and Top Providers, which means the competition layer is not tied to one narrow game family.
Prize pools are described as reaching thousands of dollars or coins, and that wording matters because it shows the reward side is not limited to one cash-only ladder. The pack also confirms that coins are part of the reward picture, while the Achievement page gives long-standing players a place to revisit what they have already reached.
| Group or Reward Layer | What Is Confirmed | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Live Casino | Named as a tournament group | Shows that live-table play can feed directly into competition logic |
| Pokies | Named as a tournament group | Shows that reel-led play is part of the reward structure, not only regular gameplay |
| Top Providers | Named as a tournament group | Shows that competition can also be grouped beyond one single game style |
| Prize Pools | Described as worth thousands of dollars or coins | Shows that rewards are broader than one balance type |
| Achievement Page | Referenced for long-standing player progress | Shows that the competition layer also stores visible progress over time |
This table gives the structural picture, not a full event list. Automatic entry and the no-entry-fee rule sit outside it because those facts belong to the account-level mechanics rather than to group-by-group comparison.
The Weekly League is the clearest part of the competition system because its scoring is exact. Each $1.5 bet or sports bet equals 1 point, and each $1.5 deposit equals 30 points.
The leaderboard also moves quickly enough to matter in practice. It is described as updating every minute, so ranking is not static and should not be read like a one-time result screen.
| Scoring Element | Confirmed Number or Timing | Why It Changes Ranking |
|---|---|---|
| Bet Scoring | $1.5 equals 1 point | Regular play feeds directly into the leaderboard |
| Deposit Scoring | $1.5 equals 30 points | Funding the account can move ranking faster than betting alone |
| Leaderboard Timing | Updated every minute | Position changes are visible without long waiting periods |
The table covers the exact scoring core. Automatic Weekly League entry and the broader competition role still sit outside it because those points explain how the system starts, not how each row changes.
Reward logic here is broader than a simple balance increase. Coins and Bonus Crab Spin are both explicitly named, which means the competition side includes non-cash style rewards as well as broader prize structures.
Threshold rewards can include 1-500 Coins and a Bonus Crab Spin, and rewards are generally credited automatically either when the event ends or when the relevant threshold is reached. That makes the reward flow feel more system-driven than manually claimed.
The easiest mistake is to treat every reward system in the account as if it worked the same way. Tournaments at Wazamba do not behave like a standard welcome bonus, and they also do not behave like a sportsbook deposit offer even though all three can add value.
The difference is functional. Tournament rewards depend on rankings, points, groups, and thresholds, while a standard bonus depends on qualification rules and a sportsbook offer may depend on deposit amount, event conditions, or betting structure.
The Weekly League in the account is therefore a competition mechanic first. Its exact scoring numbers belong to tournament logic, while bonus figures such as a first deposit match belong to the standard offer pages instead.
Stay on this page when the real question is how rankings, points, thresholds, and reward crediting work. Leave it when the question shifts away from competition logic and into event betting, standard offers, or account handling.
The right next step depends on what has become more important than the competition layer itself. Sports and racing belong to betting choice, standard bonuses belong to offer-family logic, and support belongs to missing rewards or account-side problems once the structure is already clear.
If the real question is still what to bet on rather than how rankings and points work, move back to sports and racing instead of staying in the competition layer.
If the main interest is standard account offers rather than leaderboards and reward thresholds, the cleaner next step is bonus details.
When the issue is no longer about competition logic but about a missing reward or account problem, the next move is to use the available support options with the right context already prepared.
No extra entry fee is described in the supplied tournament material, so the competition layer is not presented as a separate paid entry product.
Rankings are tied to real-money activity. In the Weekly League, points come from both bets and deposits rather than from one action alone.
The confirmed groups include Live Casino, Pokies, and Top Providers.
They are described as worth thousands of dollars or coins, which shows that the reward layer can go beyond one small fixed prize type.
Coins are part of the confirmed tournament reward system and can appear as threshold or prize-pool value rather than as ordinary cash balance.
It is a named reward inside the competition system and can appear alongside coins when the relevant threshold is reached.
The supplied pack presents Weekly League as an ongoing weekly competition layer tied to qualifying games and ranking updates.
Each $1.5 bet or sports bet equals 1 point, and each $1.5 deposit equals 30 points.
The leaderboard is described as updating every minute.
Yes. Rewards are generally credited automatically either after the event ends or when the relevant threshold is reached.