He Bet on a Traffic Camera — and Won $363,000. Casino streamer Xposed brings real-life betting to the front.
Blink and you’d have missed it. A light changed. A vehicle moved. Numbers flickered on a betting interface. And seconds later, a Twitch audience watched in disbelief as a wager settled for $363,000.
The man behind the bet? xQc — known to gambling fans as xPosed — one of the internet’s most watched risk-takers. The jaw-dropping moment, first reported by Vegas Slots Online, has rocketed around social media and thrown a spotlight on what might be the strangest new craze in online wagering.
Forget sports. Forget roulette.
People are now betting on real streets, real cars and real life.


Yes.
A new wave of gambling products is turning live public camera feeds into rapid-fire betting rounds. If something happens in the next few seconds, you win. If it doesn’t, you don’t.
It’s simple. Brutal. Addictive.
And when a famous streamer hits big, it becomes irresistible viewing.
“One ordinary moment. One click. $363,000.”
Have you ever seen this before? 🚦
– @Xposed pic.twitter.com/4D2wHQa2SL
— Roobet (@Roobet) February 12, 2026
The buzz around xPosed’s win lands just as suppliers are rolling out titles built around this exact concept. One of the loudest is 155.io, whose headline act Rush Hour transforms live traffic junctions into a never-ending carousel of bets.
Cars, crossings, lights, movement — each can become a market. Each can settle in seconds. Then it starts all over again.
To fans, it’s the ultimate reality show: unscripted, unpredictable, always on.
A supplier can launch a hundred games and barely cause a ripple.
But one viral win on a major Twitch channel? That’s a tidal wave.
Clips of the $363k hit spread within hours. Group chats lit up. Reddit threads multiplied. Suddenly people who had never heard of CCTV betting were asking where they could try it.
The formula is familiar: big personality + huge risk + ridiculous payout = internet wildfire.
Sure — bookmakers have long taken wagers on elections, TV finales and celebrity drama. And crypto prediction sites such as Polymarket proved punters will put money on almost anything.
But betting on a traffic light that’s changing right now?
That’s a new level of immediacy.
You’re not waiting days. You’re waiting heartbeats.
“It’s not next week. It’s the next five seconds.”
The thrill is obvious. The complications are too.
The people walking through those shots didn’t sign up to be gambling props. If bettors know a location, could someone try to interfere? And how will regulators react when viral clips turn ordinary citizens into the stars of high-stakes wagers?
These are the debates bubbling up behind the scenes — and history shows they get louder once big money and mainstream attention collide.
Maybe. Maybe not.
What’s undeniable is that the appetite is there. Viewers love authenticity. They love chaos. And they love watching someone else win life-changing cash from what looks like pure randomness.
For a few electric minutes on Twitch, a nondescript intersection became the most exciting venue in gambling.
Tomorrow it could be another camera. Another street. Another streamer.
Another fortune.
You must be logged in to post a comment.