Last updated: May 2026
Cookies are small text files stored on your device when you visit a website. Some last until you close your browser (session cookies), others stick around until they expire or you delete them (persistent cookies). This page explains which ones we use and how you can control them.
These keep the site working — login sessions, age verification, security checks. Without them the site breaks. They're always active and can't be turned off. They don't track you for marketing and aren't shared with anyone.
These tell us how people use the site — which pages get visited, how long sessions last, where traffic comes from. The data is aggregated and anonymized. We can't identify individual visitors from it. These only activate if you say yes in the cookie banner.
These help us show relevant messages about the game to people who've visited the site before. They track whether you've seen a particular message so we don't repeat it. No detailed behavioral profiles, no third-party ads. Only active with your consent.
When you first visit, a banner at the bottom lets you accept all, decline non-essential, or open settings to pick which types you want. Your choices are saved for future visits. To reset, clear your browser cookies and the banner will show again.
Every modern browser lets you block or delete cookies in its settings. Blocking everything may break parts of the site — especially login and the age gate. Check your browser's help section for specifics.
If you opt into analytics or marketing cookies, some data may pass through third-party services we use for website analytics. Those services operate under their own privacy policies and are bound by agreements with us. We don't use cookies from ad networks or social platforms.
We may change this policy if our cookie usage changes. We'll update the date at the top and, if we add new cookie types, we'll reset your preferences and ask again.
Email [email protected], call +64 3 477 2589, or write to 15 Hope Street, Central Dunedin, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand. For broader data questions, see our Privacy Policy.