Wesley Fei Net Worth 2026: Crypto Fortune, Poker Career & Controversies
Wesley Fei is one of the most talked-about and divisive figures in high-stakes livestreamed poker. The Chinese-born, US-based crypto entrepreneur lost the largest pot in televised poker history: $3,081,000 to Tom Dwan on Hustler Casino Live in May 2023.

Wesley Fei’s self-reported net worth exceeds $40 million, built on what he describes as Bitcoin mining and crypto trading. None of that wealth has been independently documented. This profile separates verified poker results from self-reported claims and aggregator estimates.
What follows is built on Hendon Mob results, third-party livestream tracker data, public court filings, and Fei’s own statements: not the aggregator sites that recycle unverified numbers.
Player Quick Facts

- Full Name: Wenzhi 'Wesley' Fei
- Nickname: Wes Side / Dr. Hash
- Born: Reportedly mid-1990s (exact date unverified)
- Nationality: United States (Hendon Mob); Chinese-born (moved to US as a child)
- Residence: San Francisco, CA
- Education: Reportedly studied computer science in California
- Net Worth (Estimate): $40M-$44M (self-reported, not publicly confirmed)
- Live Tournament Earnings: $443,515 (as of June 2026)
- WSOP Bracelets: 0
- Biggest Televised Pot: $3,081,000 lost to Tom Dwan (May 2023)
- Primary Format: High-stakes cash games
- Known For: Poker's largest televised pot; Hustler Casino Live regular; crypto entrepreneur (Dr. Hash)
Wesley Fei's Net Worth
Wesley Fei’s net worth is not publicly confirmed. On a 2022 Hustler Casino Live broadcast he hinted at a specific eight-figure sum, and aggregator biography sites have since published estimates in a narrow range around it.
No independent source has verified these numbers. Unlike players with tracked sponsorship deals or public business filings, Fei’s claimed wealth rests entirely on his own statements about crypto trading profits.
What is Wesley Fei’s net worth?
Wesley Fei’s net worth is estimated at $40 million to $44 million, but the range depends entirely on who is making the claim.
| Estimate | Source | Status |
|---|---|---|
| “Over $40 million” | Fei himself (2022 HCL stream) | Self-reported, unverified |
| $40M-$44M | Aggregator biography sites | No methodology disclosed |
| No entry | CelebrityNetWorth | Not listed |
No financial disclosures or filings have been traced to him. The figure originated from Fei during a live broadcast, and aggregator sites later inflated the number without disclosing a methodology.
Crypto fortune vs poker earnings
Fei presents his wealth as originating from cryptocurrency, not poker. He claims a background in Bitcoin mining, crypto trading, and running digital asset funds. The Early Career section below covers the full timeline, and none are backed by public records.
His tracked poker results tell a different story. Both his verified tournament earnings and his on-stream cash game record sit far below the figures he claims.
The $400,000 suite and lifestyle spending
During the November 2023 Las Vegas Formula 1 Grand Prix, Fei showed off a 46th-floor Augustus Villa at Caesars Palace that he said cost $400,000 per night during the race weekend.
He said the stay was comped through gambling, making it a host valuation rather than a paid invoice. VIP-Grinders covered the episode when he first shared it, including footage of his $400K-per-night Las Vegas suite.
The comp confirms a gambling volume large enough to generate six-figure perks, but it does not confirm a specific net worth.
What we can verify: tracked poker results
Two public data sources track Wesley Fei’s poker results.
Live tournaments (Hendon Mob): $443,515 in career earnings across 25-plus cashes, mostly from WSOP events. His best result is a $197,550 payout for 6th at the 2025 WSOP Mystery Millions. He ranks around 8,417th on the all-time money list.
Livestreamed cash games (third-party tracker): a net result of approximately -$608,660 across all tracked sessions as of June 2026. That figure covers roughly 149 episodes and 791 hours on Hustler Casino Live and Bally Live combined.
These tracked numbers account for a tiny fraction of his claimed $40 million-plus net worth. His private cash game results, off-stream sessions, and crypto portfolio are unknown. Gross tournament payouts are also not profit: buy-ins, travel, and any staking arrangements reduce the real return.
Early Career & Crypto Background
Before Wesley Fei became a fixture on Hustler Casino Live, he built a public persona around cryptocurrency. His origin story is self-told, and none of the financial details have been confirmed by outside sources.

What is Wesley Fei’s real name?
His legal name is Wenzhi Fei, confirmed by his Hendon Mob player page. He goes by Wesley Fei at the poker table and has used several aliases across different circles.
In poker he is known as “Wesley” or “Wes Side” (sometimes styled “Westside Wesley”). In the crypto world he operates under the name Dr. Hash, which appears in his X bio and across his business profiles.
How did Wesley Fei make his money?
Fei has said his wealth comes from Bitcoin mining and trading. He has described himself as an early miner who built capital before entering derivatives trading on the BitMEX exchange.
He founded a crypto venture called Infinite Decentralization Capital (IDC) and currently lists “Block Infinity Fund” as his active project on X. Neither fund has publicly available performance records or regulatory filings.
He has also spoken about losing roughly $20 million in the crypto market before discovering poker, framing the loss as a fraction of his peak holdings. That claim, like the rest of his financial narrative, is undocumented.
Why is Wesley Fei called Dr. Hash?
The alias ties directly to his Bitcoin-mining persona. “Hash” refers to hashrate, the computing power used to mine cryptocurrency. Fei adopted the name in crypto circles and still uses it on his X account.
The nickname stuck as he transitioned into poker, where commentators and fellow players occasionally reference it alongside his other aliases.
The pivot to poker
Fei entered poker in early 2022 and made his Hustler Casino Live debut on Episode 107, 12 January 2022. He arrived as a wealthy recreational player with no competitive track record and immediately began playing at stakes most professionals avoid.
His crossover from crypto to high-stakes cash games is not unique. A growing number of crypto entrepreneurs have moved into livestreamed poker since 2020, drawn by the audience reach and nosebleed stakes. For readers unfamiliar with the intersection, VIP-Grinders covers how crypto poker sites actually work in a dedicated guide.
Within months of his debut, Fei had become one of HCL’s most frequent and highest-volume players. By May 2023 he was sitting in the show’s first-ever Million Dollar Game, putting his claimed fortune on the line at the highest stakes on television.
Wesley Fei's Tournament Career
Wesley Fei is primarily a cash game player, but his tournament record is more active than casual observers might expect. His Hendon Mob profile shows $443,515 in career live earnings across 25-plus cashes, heavily concentrated in WSOP events.
He ranks roughly 8,417th on the all-time money list. His biggest cashes have come in lower buy-in WSOP events, but he has also entered the $10,000 Main Event and a $5,300 High Roller.
Has Wesley Fei won a WSOP bracelet?
No. Wesley Fei has zero WSOP bracelets and no World Poker Tour or other major titles. His two largest results are a 6th-place finish and a runner-up spot, both in $1,000 buy-in events.
His 2025 WSOP schedule shows heavier participation than his early years. He recorded eight-plus cashes across the series, ranging from $800 Deepstacks to a $5,300 High Roller.
Top verified cashes
The table below covers his five largest tracked results. His full Hendon Mob page lists 25-plus additional cashes that make up the remaining career total.
| Year | Event | Finish | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | WSOP $1,000 Mystery Millions | 6th | $197,550 |
| 2023 | WSOP $1,000 Flip & Go | 2nd | $100,120 |
| 2025 | WSOP $800 Deepstack | 6th | $50,526 |
| 2024 | $5,000 No Limit Hold’em | 3rd | $34,650 |
| 2022 | WSOP $10,000 Main Event | 704th | $21,000 |
The Mystery Millions remains his biggest cash. Fei was eliminated holding A♣K♣ against pocket tens when the board bricked out. The Main Event min-cash in 2022, his first year playing poker, shows he was entering major events from the start.

Wesley Fei's Cash Game Career & the Tom Dwan Pot
Cash games are where Wesley Fei built his reputation and generated the headlines that define his poker career. From his January 2022 HCL debut he threw himself into the highest-stakes action available on livestreamed poker, quickly becoming one of the show’s most polarising regulars.
Inside HCL’s Million Dollar Game
In late May 2023, Hustler Casino Live launched its first-ever Million Dollar Game: a $500/$1,000 cash game with a $3,000 big-blind ante and a minimum buy-in of $1 million. VIP-Grinders published a detailed recap of all three days: inside HCL’s Million Dollar Game.
Fei bought in for $3,000,000, one of the largest individual stakes in the show’s history. The session ran across three days and peaked at roughly 58,000 concurrent viewers, a record for HCL at that time.
What followed was the most expensive hand in televised poker history.
What was the biggest pot in televised poker history?
The answer is $3,081,000, lost by Wesley Fei to Tom Dwan on the final day of the Million Dollar Game, 31 May 2023.
Fei three-bet with A♦K♥ and Dwan four-bet holding Q♠Q♣. The board ran out 8-8-3-5-6, missing Fei’s ace-king entirely. He triple-barrel-bluffed all-in with nothing but ace-high, and Dwan called.
The pot shattered the previous record of $1,978,000, set by Patrik Antonius against Maverick Gaming CEO Eric Persson on PokerGO in February 2023. The Las Vegas Review-Journal corroborated the record.
For the full list of record-setting hands, see VIP-Grinders’ roundup of the biggest cash game pots ever streamed.

The $2.2 million LSG Hank pot
The Dwan pot was not the only record-setting hand from the Million Dollar Game. In the same session, Fei won a pot worth roughly $2.2 million against the player known as “LSG Hank.”
Fei flopped a set of sevens against Hank’s pocket queens. At the time, commentators called it the second-biggest pot in U.S. televised poker history.
The contrast between the two hands captures the swings that define high-stakes cash games. Fei won that hand and lost the Dwan pot across the same session, a swing of over $5 million.
How much has Wesley Fei lost on stream?
According to third-party livestream trackers, Fei’s on-stream cash game net stands at approximately -$608,660 as of June 2026. The breakdown by show tells a split story.
On Hustler Casino Live he has a tracked net loss of roughly $616,585 across the majority of his episodes. On Bally Live he shows a small net gain of approximately $7,925. The combined total covers around 149 episodes and 791 hours of tracked play.
These figures capture on-stream results only. His private sessions, off-camera games, and any side action are not tracked.
His true lifetime cash game result is unknown.
| Category | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Live tournament earnings | $443,515 (25+ cashes) | Hendon Mob |
| On-stream cash net (HCL) | -$616,585 | Third-party tracker |
| On-stream cash net (Bally Live) | +$7,925 | Third-party tracker |
| Combined on-stream net | -$608,660 (~791 hrs) | Third-party tracker |
| Biggest pot lost | $3,081,000 vs Tom Dwan | HCL, May 2023 |
| Biggest pot won | ~$2.2M vs LSG Hank | HCL, May 2023 |
The $1 million stunt
Fei once bought into a $5/$5 no-limit game for $1,000,000, a buy-in roughly 200,000 times the big blind. The move was pure spectacle, but it reinforced his image as a player who treats bankroll management as optional.
For players curious about where nosebleed cash games run in the online world, VIP-Grinders maintains a guide to where the nosebleed games run online.
Playing Style & Reputation
Wesley Fei plays a loose-aggressive style defined by oversized bets, frequent bluffs, and a willingness to put his entire stack at risk on marginal holdings. His approach generates action and content, but his on-stream net loss suggests it comes at a cost.
- Pre-flop style: Loose-aggressive; enters many pots with wide ranges
- Signature move: Triple-barrel bluffing with little or no equity
- Three-bet frequency: Well above average; regularly light three-bets and four-bets
- Bet sizing: Oversized; often uses pot-sized or larger bets to pressure opponents
- Risk tolerance: Extreme; willing to commit seven-figure sums on a single hand
- Training background: No known coaching or formal study; self-taught recreational profile

The triple-barrel bluff
Fei’s most famous hand, the $3,081,000 pot against Tom Dwan, was a textbook triple-barrel bluff gone wrong. He fired three streets with ace-king on a board that gave him nothing, betting flop, turn, and river before shoving all-in on the end.
The line was high-risk by design. Against a weaker opponent or a tighter player, the aggression might have earned a fold. Against Dwan, who held an overpair and reads these spots professionally, it was expensive.
Triple-barrel bluffing is a legitimate weapon at nosebleed stakes when used selectively. VIP-Grinders breaks down why triple-barrel bluffs backfire when frequency outpaces hand-reading ability.
Pre-flop aggression and light three-betting
Fei three-bets and four-bets at a rate far above what most professionals consider optimal in a standard cash game. His sizing tends to be large, often committing a significant percentage of his stack before the flop is dealt.
This approach has two effects. It puts opponents in difficult spots with medium-strength hands, and it inflates pots to a size where post-flop mistakes become catastrophically expensive.
For readers wanting to understand the strategic trade-offs, VIP-Grinders covers the maths behind light three-betting in a dedicated strategy guide.
The “action player” reputation
Fei is valued by producers and fellow players for the action he creates at the table. Livestreamed poker depends on big pots and dramatic confrontations, and Fei delivers both consistently.
His style draws comparisons to other wealthy recreational players who treat poker as entertainment rather than a profession. The distinction matters: a professional playing Fei’s style would go broke; a player with a crypto fortune behind him can absorb the variance indefinitely.
For context, Fei’s tracked rate across 791 hours of on-stream play works out to approximately -$770 per hour. Whether that makes him a bad player or simply a player with different incentives is a question the high-stakes community continues to debate.
Controversies & Public Disputes
Wesley Fei has been involved in several public disputes since entering high-stakes poker. The incidents below are presented in neutral terms, sourced from public statements, court filings, and VIP-Grinders’ own reporting.
Is Wesley Fei a crypto scammer?
In 2023, Reddit users accused Fei of involvement with a failed cryptocurrency project called SupremeX. The allegations framed him as a promoter who profited while retail investors lost money.
Fei denied any wrongdoing. No fraud charges have been filed, and no regulatory action has been taken against him in connection with SupremeX or any other crypto venture.
VIP-Grinders covered the episode at the time, including the Reddit crypto-scam accusations and Fei’s public response.
What happened between Wesley Fei and Arnaud Mattern?
In late 2023, Fei went public with allegations that a cheating ring had operated during an October 2023 private poker game. He named French poker professional Arnaud Mattern and made what he described as death-threat claims. VIP-Grinders reported on the cheating-ring claims he went public with at the time.
Mattern denied all allegations and stated he was in France during the game in question. On 1 February 2024, Mattern filed a defamation lawsuit against Wesley Fei and Nik Arcot in the Superior Court of California, Orange County, seeking damages in excess of $50,000.
Nik Arcot, better known in the poker world as his frequent table ally Nik Airball, was named as a co-defendant. The current disposition of the case has not been independently verified as of June 2026.
Tony Mars and the Ye Shen charges
A related name from the private-game circuit, Ye Shen (known as “Tony Mars”), was charged on 9 March 2026 in Clark County over approximately $300,000 in bounced cheques (non-sufficient funds) at the Wynn.
Those charges are unrelated to the poker cheating allegations Fei raised. No finding has been made on the original cheating claims.

The Huss feud at the Million Dollar Game
On 29 May 2023, during the Million Dollar Game session, Fei clashed with fellow player Hasan Onay, known on stream as “Huss” (username HasOnay94). Tensions escalated when Onay said on camera that he would “love to hurt him physically.”
Fei fired back verbally, and floor staff intervened to defuse the situation. The confrontation was broadcast live and generated significant attention on social media.
VIP-Grinders covered the full exchange in its report on the on-stream feud that nearly turned physical. Onay went on to finish as the session’s biggest winner, booking a net profit of roughly $1.1 million on Day 3.
Current Status & Latest Updates
As of June 2026, Wesley Fei remains an active presence in the high-stakes livestreamed poker scene. He has not announced any plans to step away from the game or from his crypto ventures.
Does Wesley Fei still play poker?
Yes. Fei continues to appear on Hustler Casino Live and cashed at the 2025 WSOP with a 6th-place finish in the $1,000 Mystery Millions for $197,550, his biggest live tournament result.
Off the table, his X account remains active with approximately 130,000 followers. His bio reads “Founder of Block Infinity Fund, Poker player, Trader,” though no verified business filings have surfaced for 2025 or 2026. He has no known sponsorship deals and plays as an independent recreational player.
With a tracked on-stream loss approaching seven figures and no visible change in stakes or frequency, Fei’s session data suggests he treats the deficit as immaterial.
If his claimed crypto wealth is real, a $608,000 loss across three-plus years of entertainment is noise. If the wealth narrative is overstated, the trajectory becomes more significant.
Below are the latest articles from VIP-Grinders tagged to Wesley Fei. Check back regularly as we cover WSOP 2026 and the broader tournament calendar.
FAQs
Quick answers to the most searched questions about Wesley Fei’s net worth, crypto background, poker results, and controversies.
What is Wesley Fei's net worth?
Wesley Fei’s net worth is estimated at $40 million to $44 million based on his own statements and aggregator biography sites. He hinted at a figure above $40 million on a 2022 Hustler Casino Live broadcast. The estimate has never been independently confirmed, and no CelebrityNetWorth entry exists.
How did Wesley Fei make his money?
Fei says his wealth comes from Bitcoin mining and cryptocurrency trading. He has described himself as an early miner, a derivatives trader on BitMEX, and founder of ventures including Infinite Decentralization Capital and Block Infinity Fund. None of these claims are backed by public records.
What is Wesley Fei's real name?
His legal name is Wenzhi Fei, confirmed by his Hendon Mob player page. He goes by Wesley Fei at the poker table and uses the alias Dr. Hash in crypto circles.
Why is Wesley Fei called Dr. Hash?
The name references Bitcoin hashrate, the computing power used to mine cryptocurrency. Fei adopted it during his time in the crypto industry and still uses it on his X account.
Has Wesley Fei won a WSOP bracelet?
No. Wesley Fei has zero WSOP bracelets and no other major poker titles. His best WSOP result is a 6th-place finish in the 2025 Mystery Millions for $197,550.
What was the biggest pot in poker history?
The largest pot in televised poker history is $3,081,000, played between Wesley Fei and Tom Dwan on Hustler Casino Live’s Million Dollar Game on 31 May 2023. Fei triple-barrel-bluffed with ace-king and Dwan called with pocket queens.
How much has Wesley Fei lost on stream?
According to third-party livestream trackers, Fei’s on-stream cash game net stands at approximately -$608,660 as of June 2026 across roughly 149 episodes and 791 hours. These figures cover tracked HCL and Bally Live sessions only and exclude private or off-camera play.
Is Wesley Fei a crypto scammer?
Fei has faced accusations linked to a cryptocurrency project called SupremeX, which he denies. No fraud charges have been filed, and no regulatory action has been taken against him. The claims remain unproven allegations, not legal findings.
What happened between Wesley Fei and Arnaud Mattern?
Fei alleged a cheating ring operated during an October 2023 private game and named French professional Arnaud Mattern. Mattern denied all allegations, stated he was in France during the game, and filed a defamation lawsuit against Fei and Nik Arcot in February 2024. The disposition of the case has not been verified as of June 2026.
Does Wesley Fei still play poker?
Yes. As of June 2026, Fei is still active on Hustler Casino Live and cashed 6th at the 2025 WSOP Mystery Millions for $197,550. He continues to present as both a poker player and crypto entrepreneur on his X account.
How old is Wesley Fei?
Wesley Fei’s exact age is unverified. Multiple sources list different birth dates ranging from the early to mid-1990s, and he has not publicly confirmed his date of birth. He is reportedly in his late 20s or early 30s.
Where is Wesley Fei from?
Fei was born in China and moved to the United States as a child, according to multiple biographical sources. Hendon Mob lists his nationality as United States and his residence as San Francisco, California. His specific birthplace is disputed, with sources citing either Guangzhou or Chongqing.
Sources & Methodology
This profile separates verifiable facts from estimates and self-reported claims. VIP-Grinders cannot accurately calculate any player’s net worth, but we aim to publish transparent, sourced information.
How we handle net worth
Net worth figures are attributed to the claimant or the aggregator site. They are never stated as confirmed fact. Any figures mentioned are estimates and may vary due to crypto holdings, staking arrangements, and private business interests.
How we report earnings
Tournament earnings come from Hendon Mob and are tagged “as of June 2026” because the figure changes with each new cash. Results are cross-checked against official WSOP records where applicable.
How we report cash game results
Cash game results come from third-party livestream trackers and cover on-stream sessions only. Private games, off-camera sessions, and any staking arrangements are excluded. Tracked figures represent a partial picture of any player’s true cash game performance.
How we cover controversies
We link to our own reporting when controversies are discussed and clearly label what is alleged, denied, or unresolved. Where a lawsuit has been filed, we note the filing details and the current known status. Nothing in this profile should be read as a legal finding.
References
- The Hendon Mob – verified live tournament earnings and career cashes (#967989)
- WSOP.com – official World Series of Poker event results and bracelet records
- Las Vegas Review-Journal – mainstream news verification of the $3,081,000 record pot
- X (@CryptoApprenti1) – Wesley Fei's public statements, bio, and current activity
