BC.GAME Launches Cashback and Combo Quest for Knockout Stage
BC.GAME confirmed on Tuesday two sportsbook promotions for the knockout stage of the 2026 football season: Road to the Final Cashback and Knockout Combo Daily Quest. Both campaigns run through July and apply to settled bets on knockout-stage football markets, with cashback on net losses and fixed rewards for multi-leg Combo and Bet Builder bets.
Road to the Final Cashback runs from June 28 to July 19 and applies to eligible settled bets on 2026 football knockout-stage markets. The reward depends on a player’s net loss, calculated as total losses minus total winnings, with Free Bets excluded from that calculation.
Players who reach at least $1,000 in net loss qualify for Free Bet cashback that starts at a 3% rate. The rate rises across higher loss tiers up to a maximum of 12%, capped at $8,000 per player. BC.GAME said rewards will be credited by July 31 and stay valid for 30 days.
The second promotion, Knockout Combo Daily Quest, runs from June 28 to July 15 and covers fixtures from the Round of 32 through the semifinals. It applies to Combo and Bet Builder bets.
A qualifying bet needs a minimum $100 stake, at least 3, 5 or 7 selections, and minimum odds of 1.20 per selection. Both winning and losing bets count if they meet these terms. Rewards are paid as a $15 Free Bet for 3 legs, $30 for 5 legs, and $50 for 7 legs, based on the highest tier matched rather than stacked rewards.
No daily limit applies to rewards under the Combo Quest, BC.GAME said. Free Bets are credited automatically after settlement and stay valid for three days.
💡TGJ Take
These two promotions split the audience by risk appetite rather than compete for the same player. The cashback offer protects high-volume bettors against a bad knockout-stage run, while the Combo Quest pays smaller, frequent rewards for multi-leg matchday bets. For affiliates, the $100 minimum stake on Combo Quest sets a reasonably high bar, so traffic quality will matter more than volume. Operators running comparable knockout-stage campaigns should treat the 12% cashback ceiling as a competitive benchmark, not a number to undercut carelessly, given the $8,000 cap already limits exposure.