Information We May Collect

When you browse through our guides on bcgames, your browser and our server have a little “handshake.” During that process, we might pick up some bits and pieces of technical info. We use the word “may” because, depending on your privacy settings, some of this stuff might not even reach us.
- Error Logs & Anti-Spam: If the site crashes or if a bot tries to spam us, our system logs that event to keep things running smooth and secure for the real humans.
- Technical Data: This includes things like what kind of device you’re using (are you on a sleek iPhone or a clunky old desktop?), your browser type (Chrome, Safari, Firefox?), and your operating system.
- Language Settings: We check this so we don’t serve you a guide in a language you don’t speak.
- Cookies: Small files that help the site remember you (more on that in a minute).
- Aggregated Statistics: We look at things like “1,000 people read the bc game bonus guide today.” We don’t see that you specifically read it, just that someone did.
Information We Do Not Collect
This is the part I want you to pay the most attention to. Since we aren’t the actual bc.game platform, there are things we never ask for. If you ever see a popup on this site asking for the following, close your browser immediately because it ain’t us:
- Sensitive Credentials: This includes your passwords, your 2FA codes, or — and this is a big one — your seed phrases or private keys.
- Personal Identity: We don’t want your full name, your home address, or your mother’s maiden name.
- Contact Info: No phone numbers, no private emails (unless you’re reaching out to us for support).
- Financial & Payment Data: We never ask for credit card numbers, bank details, or crypto wallet balances.
Look, your private keys are the keys to your kingdom. Never, ever give them to anyone, especially not an informational site. We provide the map; you keep the keys.
Cookies: Why and How to Disable
Cookies get a bad rap, but they’re mostly just like a “Save State” in a video game. On this site, we use them for a few basic reasons:
- Stability: They help the site load faster by caching certain elements.
- Preferences: If you set the site to “Dark Mode” or choose a specific language, a cookie remembers that so you don’t have to change it every time you click a new link.
- Analytics: They help us understand if people are actually finding the bc game app instructions or if they’re getting stuck.
How to opt-out? If you aren’t a fan of cookies, you can tell your browser to kick them to the curb. Just go into your settings (usually under “Privacy and Security”) and select “Block all cookies.”
The Catch: If you disable them, some stuff might get a bit wonky. The site might forget your language preference, or you might find yourself having to re-adjust settings every time you visit. It’s a trade-off between convenience and “clean” browsing.
Analytics & Third-Party Tools
To keep the lights on and make sure the content is actually good, we might use some third-party tools. For example, we might use something like Google Analytics to see the aggregated metrics I mentioned earlier.
These providers have their own massive privacy policies that govern how they handle that data. We don’t control their “stack,” but we choose tools that are generally considered industry standard. We don’t name specific ones here because we might swap them out for better, more private options as technology evolves in 2026. Just know that any data processed by these tools is handled according to their rules, and we only see the “big picture” numbers, not your personal details.
Links to Other Sites
You’ll notice that our guides often link out to other places — maybe the official bc.game site, a tech support forum, or a crypto wallet provider.
Once you click a link and leave our domain, our rules no longer apply. Those external sites have their own privacy policies and their own ways of doing things. I always tell my students: be a skeptic. Before you perform a bc game login on a site we linked to, double-check the URL. Make sure it’s legitimate. We try our best to only link to the real deal, but the internet changes fast, so stay sharp.
Security and Retention
We take “reasonable measures” to keep the minimal data we have safe. This means limiting who has access to our server logs and using basic monitoring to spot any weird activity.
However, I’ve gotta be honest — no system is 100% unhackable. Even the big banks get hit sometimes. We don’t keep data longer than we need it (usually just long enough to generate our monthly reports), and we don’t hoard old logs. But we can’t offer an “absolute guarantee” because that doesn’t exist in the real world.

Contact for Privacy Requests
If you have questions, or if you actually sent us a message and want us to delete it, you can reach out. For anything privacy-related, shoot an email to: [email protected] (obviously, replace that with our actual domain).
You can ask us:
- What data do you have on me? (Spoiler: usually just an IP address in a log file).
- Can you delete my comment or message?
- Can you help me figure out how to block cookies on this site?

