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Thursday, July 2, 2026
Pro Slot Games Every Slot of the Gaming World · proslotgames.com · also proslotgames com / ProSlotGames
Issue №32
Thursday, July 2, 2026 · Global Edition
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Independent· Source-cited· Premium editorial standard· 8-editor team· proslotgames.com
Latest From the Editor: Why We Built Pro Slot Games

Corrections Policy

Every publication makes mistakes. What separates a trustworthy one from the rest is what it does next. Pro Slot Games corrects its errors in the open — visibly, promptly, and with a record that stays put. This page explains how our corrections process works, how to report something you believe we got wrong, and where our corrections are logged so anyone can see them.

Correcting the record is the fourth of the Four Rules that govern everything we publish: source every claim, real authors only, sponsored is segregated, and correct or remove. We take the last one as seriously as the first three. A correction is not an embarrassment to be hidden; it is the system working.

How we handle corrections

When we learn that a published article may contain an error, we treat it as a priority. An editor reviews the claim against its sources, determines whether a mistake was in fact made, and decides what the piece needs.

For a substantive factual error — a wrong name, date, developer, mechanic, format, figure, or any claim a reader might rely on — we fix the text and add a clear correction note recording what was changed and, where it helps, why. The note stays with the article. We do not silently overwrite a mistake and move on, because a correction the reader cannot see is not a correction at all; it is just a quieter version of the original error.

For a minor issue that does not change the meaning or accuracy of a piece — a typo, a broken link, a formatting slip — we may fix it without a formal note, though we will still log anything that affected a reader’s understanding.

In the rare case where a piece is so flawed that it cannot be responsibly repaired, we remove it rather than leave inaccurate information standing. That is the “or remove” half of the rule, and we would sooner take something down than let it mislead.

Corrections are not subject to outside approval. No advertiser, publisher, or platform can request that we suppress a correction, and none can demand one that the facts do not support. We correct because the record is wrong, full stop.

How to report an error

Readers are one of the most reliable ways we catch mistakes, and we genuinely want to hear from you. If you believe something we published is inaccurate, please email corrections@proslotgames.com.

To help us act quickly, it is useful to include the title or link of the article, the specific claim you believe is wrong, and — if you have one — a source that supports the correct version. You do not need to be certain or to prove your case; a good-faith flag is enough for us to look. We review every credible report, and where one identifies a genuine error, we act on it and update the piece and this log accordingly. If a report turns out not to reflect an error, we will not add a correction, but we appreciate the flag either way.

For broader questions about our standards or a particular editorial decision — as opposed to a specific factual mistake — editorial@proslotgames.com is the better address.

Correction log

In the interest of transparency, we maintain a public record of the corrections we issue. Every logged correction will note the article affected, what was wrong, and what we changed, so the history of our mistakes is as visible as the mistakes themselves.

No corrections have been issued yet. Logged corrections will appear here.

Pro Slot Games is a new publication, and an empty log is simply a reflection of that — not a claim to be error-free. As we publish, this page will grow, and we would rather it grow honestly than stay artificially blank. When the first correction is issued, it will be recorded here in full.

Why we do it this way

An open corrections process costs a publication a little pride and buys it something far more valuable: the reader’s ability to trust that what stays up is what we still stand behind. When you see a correction note on one of our pieces, you are seeing evidence that we check our work after publication and are willing to be accountable for it. That is the point. A record you can inspect is worth more than a promise you have to take on faith, and this page is where we keep that record.