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JackPoker Brings Back Its Cash Advent Calendar: 21 Days of Daily Quests and Gifts

JackPoker Brings Back Its Cash Advent Calendar: 21 Days of Daily Quests and Gifts

JackPoker decided that one Christmas promotion apparently isn’t enough. So, the operator brought back its Cash Advent Calendar, running from yesterday to December 28, with a new set of daily tasks and rewards spread across its poker, casino and betting vertical.

Here’s what it’s all about.

What’s Behind the Cash Advent Calendar

While most operators go for festive freerolls and one-off bonuses this time of year, JackPoker went with the long-form route: twenty-one days of challenges where the format changes every day. Players complete short missions in cash games, tournaments, or casino titles, and immediately receive prizes that can include instant cash, free spins, or tournament tickets.

This whole structure is something like a reward loop. Once a “day” unlocks, tasks are available until you complete them, after which the next one appears, kind of like the traditional calendar, but with poker chips and spins instead of the little chocolate squares.

The Advent Calendar runs across JackPoker’s desktop client, browser version, and APK, with mobile apps reportedly on the way. Eligible formats include NLH, PLO, Spin&Win, and MTTs with features such as Run It Twice, Mystery Bounty, and Bomb Pot.

Lucky Hands Festival Joins the Holiday Lineup

Another December promotion, the Lucky Hands Festival is running on the same timeline as the Cash Advent Calendar. The difference is that this one rewards volume rather than daily objectives. The premise is straightforward: play hands, collect tickets, and hope one of them pays off.

Lucky Hands Festival Joins the Holiday Lineup: Cash Advent Calendar

For every 1,000 hands played in cash games or tournaments, participants receive a lottery ticket for a prize draw worth $50,000. The payout distribution is a scaled jackpot: a top award of $10,000, followed by several mid-tier prizes of $5,000, $1,000, and $250.

A separate set of leaderboards, divided by stakes, adds another $50,000 in prizes. Each of the three divisions, low, medium, and high, pays the top ten finishers, with points earned on the same basis: one per thousand hands played.

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Written By: Iva Dozet News Editor