David Peters, a four-time WSOP bracelet winner with $49.6 million in career live cashes, has publicly apologised after Dylan Linde accused him of failing to settle a $50,000 staking deal from the September 2025 Triton Poker festival in Jeju, South Korea.

Linde, a three-time bracelet winner himself, posted a six-part thread on X on April 21, 2026 detailing the full timeline. Peters responded the following day, acknowledging the debt and taking responsibility for months of poor communication.
The dispute centres on a $50,000 loss that Peters has partially repaid. Roughly $23,000 remains outstanding.
What Happened Between Dylan Linde and David Peters
The deal began with a clean transaction at the 2025 WSOP, the kind of straightforward staking arrangement that happens daily on the circuit. Peters bought a piece of Linde’s action in the $50,000 PLO High Roller. Linde won the event for $2,146,414, his third bracelet and career-best cash, and paid Peters his share within days.
That smooth settlement set the stage for a reciprocal arrangement. At Triton Poker’s Jeju II festival in September 2025, Linde staked Peters for $50,000 across two main events.
Peters told Linde his liquidity at the event was low and asked to settle afterward. Linde agreed.
Neither event produced a cash. The $50,000 was a loss, and that is when the timeline went sideways.
Full Timeline of the Dispute
- Summer 2025 (WSOP): Peters buys a piece of Linde’s $50,000 PLO High Roller action. Linde wins for $2,146,414 and pays Peters his share within days.
- September 2025 (Triton Jeju II): Linde stakes Peters for $50,000 across two events. Peters asks to settle afterward due to low liquidity. Linde agrees.
- September 2025 to February 2026: Peters misses multiple opportunities to pay. He skips Poker Masters, the NAPT, and WSOP Paradise without settling. He requests Linde’s bank details but never wires funds.
- Late February 2026: Linde sets an ultimatum. Peters sends roughly $12,000.
- April 1, 2026: Peters sends another $15,000 but tells Linde he cannot cover the remaining balance of roughly $23,000.
- April 21, 2026: Linde publishes a six-part thread on X detailing the full dispute.
- April 22, 2026: Peters responds publicly, apologising and pledging to settle the rest.
Linde closed his thread by saying he had learned of other outstanding debts and felt obligated to go public.
In a reply to fellow pro Aram Oganyan, he added context: he is generally sympathetic to people who fall behind on debts, but months of unclear communication changed his view of the situation.

David Peters’ Response
Peters posted a four-part thread on X on April 22, less than 24 hours after Linde’s accusations. He did not dispute any of the facts Linde presented.
He opened by saying he deeply regretted the choices he made that led Linde to lose trust. He described the situation as one where he kept making things worse through poor communication and missed timelines.
1) I wanted to address the Dylan situation. I deeply regret the choices that I made that led to him not trusting that he was going to get paid back and felt the need to post about it. I’m sure that wasn’t an easy thing to do and I should have never allowed it to get to that point
— David Peters (@dpeterspoker17) April 22, 2026
Peters committed to making Linde whole and said he would have the matter taken care of soon. He did not provide a specific date.
He also did not explain what caused his financial difficulties. There was no mention of crypto, sports betting, private investments, or other gambling losses.
For someone with Peters’ standing among top professional poker players, that silence has been one of the more discussed aspects of his statement.
How Other Pros Reacted
The dispute drew a wide range of responses across X, landing differently depending on whether the commenter focused on Peters personally, on Linde’s decision to go public, or on the broader economics of the high-roller circuit.
Eight-time bracelet winner Shaun Deeb and WSOP champion Josh Arieh both defended the profitability of high-stakes tournament professionals. Their argument: Peters’ financial trouble most likely stems from activity outside poker, not from an inability to win at the table.
Mike Matusow used the situation to revisit his long-running claim that headline cashes on Hendon Mob leaderboards overstate the actual wealth of high-roller regulars. That argument, which has echoes in past poker debt controversies, has been circulating since at least July 2025. The Peters story gave it fresh traction.
Summary of Public Reactions
- Shaun Deeb: suggested Peters’ financial issues are more likely tied to crypto losses than poker results, and pushed back against the narrative that high-stakes tournament pros are broadly unprofitable.
- Josh Arieh: defended MTT professionals generally, saying he was confident Peters’ struggles stem from outside poker rather than an inability to win.
- Tony Dunst: expressed sympathy and respect for Linde’s decision to speak up.
- Chris Moneymaker: backed Linde’s choice to go public.
- Seth Davies: noted that most high-stakes regulars own around 50% of their own action, pushing back on claims the circuit is built on smoke and mirrors.
- Nick Palma: posted a defence of Peters’ character and cautioned against schadenfreude.
Peters’ wife, Helly Hannah, thanked Palma for his words and disclosed that she had received hate messages and threats over a dispute she was not part of. That detail is worth noting regardless of where anyone lands on the underlying disagreement.
Peters’ 2026 Tournament Activity
Peters’ near-total absence from the 2026 tournament circuit reinforces the financial picture. For a player who previously competed at the highest buy-in levels on a near-monthly basis, the change is significant.
- 2026 live cashes: one result for $13,800 at a $5,000 WPT Venetian event (February 19).
- Events skipped: U.S. Poker Open at PokerGO Studio, WSOP Paradise in the Bahamas, and the Triton Super High Roller Series return to Jeju (March 5 to April 1).
- Career totals: 417 cashes and $49,651,368 in live tournament earnings per Hendon Mob. Four WSOP bracelets (2016, 2020 Online, 2021 Online, 2022).
- Career-best cash: $2,700,000 runner-up finish at the 2016 WPT National Philippines $200,000 Super High Roller.
Peters previously won back-to-back U.S. Poker Open Championships in 2019 and 2021. He was a regular at Triton Poker festivals, Poker Masters, and Super High Roller Bowl events for years.

Missing three major series in the first four months of 2026 is a clear departure from that pattern.
Key Stats at a Glance
| Stat | David Peters | Dylan Linde |
|---|---|---|
| Career live cashes | $49,651,368 | $14,980,000+ |
| WSOP bracelets | 4 | 3 |
| Career cashes (count) | 417 | 375 |
| Biggest cash | $2,700,000 (2016) | $2,146,414 (2025) |
| Primary game | NLHE / High Rollers | PLO / Mixed Games |
| Hendon Mob profile | View profile | View profile |
Why Staking Disputes Matter in Poker
The high-roller poker economy runs heavily on trust. Players routinely buy and sell pieces of each other’s action through verbal agreements or simple text messages. There is no central clearinghouse, no escrow, and no governing body enforcing repayment.
That system works well most of the time. When it breaks down, the only enforcement mechanism is reputation, which is exactly why Linde chose to go public.
This is not the first high-profile staking or debt dispute in poker. Players like Chino Rheem, Erick Lindgren, and others have faced similar public call-outs over the years.
What sets the Peters case apart is the gap between reputation and outcome. Peters was widely regarded as one of the most dependable professionals on the circuit. Several of the public reactions specifically noted surprise that he, of all people, was the subject of this kind of dispute.
Peters has committed to settling the remaining balance. Whether and when that happens will determine how this story ends.
For the latest updates, follow our poker news coverage.
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