DraftKings is a mobile sportsbook and daily-fantasy app where users place real-money wagers on sporting events. You can install a blocker, but you hold the keys — and at the wrong
hour you’ll use them. Electric Nipple Clamps takes a different route: instead of a
wall, a witness.
Deleting the app at midnight and reinstalling it by the first quarter is the
oldest move in the book. The wall was never the problem — you hold the key to it.
So skip the wall. Add DraftKings to your watch list, name one person you’d actually
have to face, and let them see the count. Not the bets, not the balance, not what’s
on your screen — just how many times you opened it last week, by category. You can
delete an app in a weak moment. You can’t un-tell someone who already knows.
You can use Screen Time or a third-party blocker, but you control the off switch, so it comes down at the moment you most want to bet. Electric Nipple Clamps takes a different approach: you add DraftKings to your own watch list, and one person you name sees a weekly count of how often you opened it — something you can't quietly undo.
Can I self-exclude from DraftKings?
Yes. DraftKings offers self-exclusion and deposit/time limits through its responsible-gaming settings, and most U.S. states run a voluntary self-exclusion program. Those are worth using. An accountability witness is the layer that catches you on a new account or a different app.
Why do I keep reopening DraftKings after deleting it?
Re-installing takes seconds, and the urge usually arrives when your resolve is lowest. A blocker you can remove by yourself is one you eventually remove. Telling one person you trust is the part you can't take back.