For years, the standard way to top up a social-gaming account looked like this: open Facebook, DM the page, wait, send a screenshot, wait some more, get credited when an agent gets to your message. Cashing out was the same story in reverse. AGA exists to take the wait out of both directions.
What "self-serve" actually changes
Self-serve doesn't just mean a faster checkout. It means the entire flow — top-up, balance, withdrawal — runs on your tap, not someone else's queue. You don't ask permission. You don't send a screenshot. You don't sit on read.
- Top-ups post automatically the moment payment confirms.
- Withdrawals process 24/7, with an average payout of about three minutes.
- Your game credentials live in the AGA wallet — you never share a password with anybody.
Why this is the right default
Agents aren't bad. They're just a bottleneck — one human can only message so many people at once, and they have to sleep. The moment your cashflow depends on someone else being awake, you've capped what the system can do. Removing that cap is what makes 24/7, three-minute payouts possible in the first place.
“The fastest cashier is the one you don't have to talk to.”
Where humans still belong
Support, disputes, KYC checks, edge cases — those are exactly where a real person beats a script. AGA keeps humans in those loops on purpose. What we don't do is route routine transactions through them.