AMOE Generator
This AMOE generator prints a correctly formatted mail-in request so you can claim free Sweeps Coins from a sweepstakes casino without spending a cent. Pick the operator, and it lays out a 4×6 postcard with the right wording and address, ready to copy by hand and drop in the mail.
Every legitimate sweepstakes casino has to offer a free entry path. They just bury it in the terms and hope you’ll buy coins instead. This pulls it back into the open. Generate your postcard below.
AMOE Postcard Generator: Stake.us
The no-purchase-necessary path. Prints a correctly-formatted 4x6 postcard.
Full mailing instructions for Stake.us
Postcard:
- Use a 4x6 inch postcard
- Handwrite all information in black ink
Envelope:
- Handwrite "Stake Cash Credits" on the front of the envelope
- Include your return address
- Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope for return correspondence
Required statement (must appear on the postcard exactly as written):
I wish to receive Stake Cash to participate in the sweepstakes promotions offered by Stake Sweepstakes. By submitting this request, I hereby declare that I have read, understood and agree to be bound by Stake's Terms and Conditions.
Mailing address:
Sweepstakes Limited13101 Preston RD STE 110-5027
Dallas, TX 75240
Operator page verified 2026-04-19: https://stake.us/amoe
What AMOE actually is
AMOE stands for Alternative Method Of Entry, and it’s the reason sweepstakes casinos are legal in the first place. US sweepstakes law says a promotion can’t force you to pay to play. So alongside the Gold Coin packs you can buy, every operator must offer a way to get the redeemable Sweeps Coins for free. Mailing a request is that way.
This is the “no purchase necessary” line in every sweepstakes promotion, and it carries real legal weight. The free entries have to win at the same odds as paid ones, with no second-class treatment. The catch is the friction. A stamp and a handwritten card take effort, which is exactly why operators are happy to mention it once in the rules and move on.
How to send an AMOE request
Mailing a request is simple once the wording is right, and getting the wording wrong is the main reason cards get tossed. The generator handles the format. You handle the pen and the stamp.
- Pick your sweepstakes operator above. The tool fills in the exact request wording and the current mailing address.
- Copy it onto a 4×6 index card or postcard. Most operators require it handwritten, so print the layout for reference and write it out by hand.
- Include everything the rules ask for: your full name, address, and the account details tied to your sweepstakes account.
- Mail it in a stamped envelope, one request per envelope, to the address shown. Then wait for the Sweeps Coins to post to your account.
Always cross-check the address and the required wording against the operator’s current sweepstakes rules before you mail. Casinos update these from time to time, and an old address means a wasted stamp. The reviews in our sweepstakes casino section link the official rules for each brand.
The rules that get AMOE entries rejected
Sweepstakes operators are allowed to enforce their format to the letter, and they do. A card that ignores the fine print gets binned with no refund of your stamp. These are the requirements that trip people up most.
- Handwritten only. Many operators reject printed, typed or photocopied cards. Write it out yourself.
- Exact wording. The request usually has to include a specific phrase from the rules. Leave it out and the entry is void.
- One entry per envelope and per stamp. Stuffing ten requests into one envelope gets all of them disqualified.
- Correct card size. A 4×6 index card or postcard is the standard. Odd sizes can be rejected.
Follow the format and the entry has to be honored at the same odds as a paid one. That’s the law doing its job. Skip a detail and you’ve handed the operator a clean reason to ignore it.
Is it worth the stamp?
Honest answer: it depends how you value your time. A single AMOE request usually returns a small batch of Sweeps Coins, often the equivalent of a dollar or a few, far less than a coin purchase. For one card, the maths is thin once you count the stamp and the effort.
Where it earns its keep is volume and principle. Players who mail requests to several operators on a routine build a steady free balance over time, never risking a cent of their own. And it’s the cleanest way to try a sweepstakes casino before you decide whether to buy. Start with the better-rated rooms like Stake.us, Pulsz and Chumba, then mail the ones worth your time.
AMOE generator FAQ
Is mailing for free Sweeps Coins really free?
Yes, beyond the cost of a stamp and an envelope. That’s the whole point of AMOE. US law bars a sweepstakes from making payment a condition of entry, so the mail-in path has to be genuinely free and win at the same odds as bought coins.
How many Sweeps Coins will I get?
It varies by operator, but a single request usually returns a small amount, often a dollar or a few in Sweeps Coins. The value is in mailing several operators regularly and trying casinos for free, not in striking it rich off one card.
Why does my card have to be handwritten?
Because most operators specify it in their sweepstakes rules, and they enforce it. Handwriting adds friction that keeps mass-printed entries down. Print the generated layout for reference, then copy it by hand so your entry counts.
Do AMOE entries win the same prizes as bought coins?
They have to. The law requires free entries to carry the same odds and prize eligibility as paid ones. If an operator treats mail-in Sweeps Coins as second class, that’s a legal problem for them, not a feature of the model.
Play responsibly. Free entries are still entries into a casino game, and Sweeps Coins can be redeemed for real money. Treat it as entertainment, not income. 18+, or 21+ where required. Help is free and confidential: US 1-800-MY-RESET, UK GamCare 0808 8020 133, AU 1800 858 858. More in our responsible gambling hub.