
Betzino sister sites in a nutshell
Betzino is operated by Purple Bay B.V. of Willemstad, Curaçao, a company that runs exactly two casinos: Betzino, its first, launched in 2022, and Amon Casino, an Egyptian-themed follow-up added in November 2023. The licence behind both checks out: Purple Bay appears in the Curaçao Gaming Authority’s own register, under the licence number quoted in Betzino’s terms.

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Important licensing note
Credit first: Betzino’s terms name their regulator and licence, “licensed and regulated in Curaçao, by the Curaçao Gaming Control Board (OGL/2024/1368/0895)”, and Purple Bay B.V. appears in the Curaçao Gaming Authority’s register of licensed operators, with a company number (157944) and a street address in Willemstad. But a Curaçao licence, however verifiable, gives a British player none of what a UK licence exists to 1rovide: no GAMSTOP self-exclusion, no UK affordability or safer gambling standards, no independent dispute body, and no protection for your balance if the operator fails. And Betzino’s own terms go further than most in narrowing what’s on offer to a UK visitor, as this page sets out. Verifiable is good, but it still isn’t licensed here.
At a glance
Brand reviewed
Betzino (betzino.com)
Operator
Purple Bay B.V., Willemstad, Curaçao (company number 157944)
Licence
Curaçao Gaming Control Board OGL/2024/1368/0895; verified on the register; no UKGC licence
UK status
Off-limits: no UKGC licence, and the terms exclude the UK from all bonuses
Sister sites
Amon Casino; that’s the whole family
Welcome offer
200% up to £200 from a £20 deposit; 40x wagering
Support
24/7 live chat, support@betzino.com and complaints@betzino.com; no phone
Last checked
17 July 2026
The Betzino sister sites, and where to look instead
Purple Bay has been patient by Curaçao standards: two casinos in four years, where some operators launch that many in a quarter. So the Betzino sister sites list is one name long: Amon Casino, profiled first below. Because a single unavailable-to-Britain sister site doesn’t give a UK reader much to work with, the other three profiles I’ve included are licensed UK alternatives rather than sister sites: each is on a different operator and licence, each verified on the UK register today, and each chosen to answer something Betzino gets wrong for a British player.


Amon Casino
- The only sister site: Purple Bay’s second casino, launched in November 2023, a year and a half after Betzino.
- Egyptian where Betzino is magical: Gold pharaoh branding and cartoon graphics against Betzino’s spells-and-sparkles pitch, on the same licence underneath.
- Louder on bonuses: Amonbet promises new offers every day of the year, where Betzino runs a fixed weekly calendar.
- Harder to reach than Betzino: Its site wouldn’t load from Britain on repeated attempts, stalling on its gold Amon loading screen; Betzino’s opens without complaint.
- Who it suits: Not a UK player; it shares Betzino’s licence position and adds an accessibility problem on top.

PlayOJO
- An alternative, not a sister site: Run by Skill On Net Limited on UK licence 39326, verified Active on the Gambling Commission register; no connection to Purple Bay.
- The answer to 40x: PlayOJO’s whole identity is wager-free rewards, against Betzino’s 200% welcome that needs £8,000 of play to clear.
- Bonuses a UK player can actually claim: Betzino’s clause 13.14 bars the UK from every offer on its site; PlayOJO’s offers exist for the UK market.
- Real recourse: GAMSTOP, UK ADR and funds protection, the machinery Betzino’s terms replace with “what we say goes”.
- Who it suits: A UK player who liked Betzino’s slots-and-live mix and wants it with the safeguards attached.

All British Casino
- An alternative, not a sister site: Operated by L & L Europe Limited on UK licence 38758, verified Active; a clean record operator building its own casinos.
- The small-operator comparison done right: Like Purple Bay it runs a compact family, but on a UK licence with a phone line and a record to check.
- Complaints with a referee: Independent ADR and the Gambling Commission behind it, where Betzino’s route ends at its own complaints inbox.
- Pounds, not euros: No currency exchange on the way in or out, unlike Betzino’s euro-led cashier.
- Who it suits: A UK player drawn to smaller, steadier casinos rather than the big network machines.

Sky Vegas
- An alternative, not a sister site: Bonne Terre Gaming Limited on UK licence 65519, verified Active, inside the Sky family of brands.
- A name you already know: The opposite of a two-casino Curaçao operator; household-brand accountability with a huge games lobby.
- Promotions without a bar on Britain: Its offers are built for UK players, where Betzino’s weekly calendar excludes them by clause.
- Every UK protection: GAMSTOP, affordability standards, ADR and funds protection as standard.
- Who it suits: A UK player who wants maximum familiarity and scale from a licensed brand.
How this review was made
What was checked, when and how, so you can judge the page on its evidence. Our full approach is on the About Us page.
Written by: Rob Hill
Research method: Desk researched from a UK connection. The live Betzino site was read in full (casino lobby, rewards pages and each offer’s details, terms and conditions, payment options, About and licence text), the Curaçao Gaming Authority’s licence register was checked for Purple Bay B.V., and the UK register entries for each alternative were re-verified the same day. Amon Casino was attempted repeatedly but would not load from Britain; its details draw on our own records. No account was opened, and no deposit or withdrawal was made.
Checked on: 17 July 2026, on a Windows laptop using Google Chrome
Operator: Purple Bay B.V., Fransche Bloemweg 4, Willemstad, Curaçao; company number 157944, named in the site footer and terms
UKGC account: None. There’s no UK record to link to and no UK enforcement history to check.
Sources checked: The terms and conditions (bonus clauses 13.1 to 13.15, the complaints section 16, withdrawal limits and fees), each published reward’s own page (the 40x welcome among them), the payment options page, the About page, the footer licence text, and the Curaçao Gaming Authority register (Purple Bay B.V. present; licence OGL/2024/1368/0895 as cited in the terms). Companies House: not applicable, no UK company is involved.
Change log: 17 July 2026, first published version.

A casino that gave up its sportsbook
Betzino sells itself on enchantment, a “spell of luck” welcome, “magic bonus inside”, and underneath the sparkle sits an orderly, modern casino. The About page claims over 2,000 games; the lobby organises them into slots, live casino, instant win, crash, table games, dice, poker and scratch cards, with names from Playson, Hacksaw Gaming and a spread of familiar studios on the shelves. In 2026, the operator dropped its sportsbook to concentrate on the casino, a rare example of one of these sites choosing focus over sprawl, though nobody told the footer: a “Sportsbook Rules” link still sits there, a small fossil of the product it no longer offers.
The rewards system is equally structured: a 200% welcome up to £200, then a fixed weekly calendar, Spincredible Monday (25% to £250), Tuesday Cashback (up to £1,000), Wonder Win Wednesday (35% to £250), a Thursday mystery bonus, Friday’s Lucky Charm (50% to £100) and a Win-tastic Weekend top-up (20% to £200), plus an invitation-only VIP scheme. It’s a proper programme with published pages for each offer. The catch for a British reader isn’t that the calendar is fake; it’s that the terms bar you from all of it, which is the subject of the bonus section below.

Ownership, licensing and the UK position
Purple Bay B.V. is that unusual thing in the Curaçao market: an operator you can actually pin down. The footer names the company, its registration number and the ordinance it operates under; the terms cite the licence, “licensed and regulated in Curaçao, by the Curaçao Gaming Control Board (OGL/2024/1368/0895)”; and the regulator’s own register lists Purple Bay B.V. among its licensed operators. The company runs a working affiliate programme under its own name, and its corporate footprint, Fransche Bloemweg 4, Willemstad, appears consistently across its paperwork. Two casinos in four years suggests patience rather than the brand-a-month approach this market is full of.
The website’s copy isn’t spotless. The footer certificate still quotes “license number 8048/JAZZ2021-169”, a number in the format of Curaçao’s old master-licence era, while citing the new gambling ordinance beside it; the current licence number lives in the terms instead, and there’s no clickable verification seal anywhere, so a reader has to take the footer on faith or go to the register themselves, as I did. Small things, but a licensed operator should make its licence checkable in one click.
For a UK reader, the position is unambiguous. There’s no UK Gambling Commission licence, so no GAMSTOP, no affordability checks, no independent dispute route, no funds protection. The terms don’t bar British players from registering, but clause 13.14 excludes the United Kingdom from receiving or using any bonus, with winnings from any bonus claimed anyway liable to be voided, on a list scruffy enough to name Norway twice and include the Netherlands Antilles, a jurisdiction dissolved in 2010. And be careful which “Betzino” you’re even looking at: a cluster of unofficial lookalike sites presents itself as the casino’s UK edition on British-flavoured domains, quoting launch dates and game counts that don’t match the operator’s own site. betzino.com is the casino; the rest is fog.

The bonuses: published, structured, and barred to Britain
Taken on its own terms, the bonus programme is more honest than most of its market. The welcome is 200% up to £200 on a first deposit of £20 or more, and the offer’s own page states the multiple in plain sight: 40x wagering. Clearing a maxed £200 bonus therefore means £8,000 through the games, four times what any UK-licensed casino could ask since the 10x cap arrived in January 2026, but at least the number is printed on the offer rather than buried. The weekly calendar runs the same way, each offer with its own page, and Tuesday’s cashback is credited with just 1x wagering, capped at £1,000 a week, funded only by real-money play. Structurally, there’s another point in its favour: bonus money sits in a separate bonus balance, kept apart from your cash, so your own deposits aren’t locked to a bonus’s fate.
Then clause 13.14 takes it all away from British players. The United Kingdom sits on the list of markets “excluded from receiving and/or using any type of bonus”, and if a bonus is claimed from an excluded market, Betzino “reserves the right to void any winnings associated with that bonus”. There’s no site-level UK ban, the lobby loads from Britain and registration is open, so a UK player can deposit and play at a casino whose every promotion is off-limits to them by clause, at the risk of voided winnings if they claim one anyway. The bonus calendar is no mirage; it just isn’t for you. Standard tripwires apply for everyone else: one bonus per person and household, irregular-play rules against low-margin and hedged bets, and forfeiture of bonus and winnings if a bonus is cancelled mid-wagering.
Deposits, withdrawals and the printed caps
The cashier is euro-led and e-wallet-friendly: Visa and Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter, Interac and bank transfer are the named methods, the casino charges no fees of its own in either direction, and the terms cover Ethereum transactions too, though the payment page never mentions crypto. That page is the site’s one big tease: it promises processing times, transaction limits and per-method fee details, then delivers method descriptions with no numbers at all. The numbers that do exist live in the terms: withdrawals are capped at £2,000 a day and £5,000 a week, more than 25 approved withdrawal requests in a month attracts an administration fee of 2% (minimum £5) per transaction, and KYC runs to standard document checks.
Two clauses deserve a highlight before you deposit. Any claim about a transaction must be raised within six months, or “we will not consider the claim”. And the withdrawal caps mean a five-figure win leaves at £5,000 a week at best, from an operator whose complaint decisions, as the next section shows, are final by its own declaration. A tidy cashier at deposit; a metered and self-refereed one at scale.
Support and complaints
Day to day: 24/7 live chat, plus a support address at support@betzino.com. There’s no customer support phone number. Against its market, publishing working email addresses at all counts as above average, and the complaints route is written down properly: support first, then escalation to complaints@betzino.com, with a final response targeted within 10 days, extendable by six weeks with notice.
Read to the end of that section, though, because clause 16.3 is where the ladder stops: “Our decision in this matter is final. In other words, what we say goes.” That’s verbatim. No ADR body is named, no external referee is offered, and the six-month claim window applies. The regulator behind the licence at least exists, with a register you can search, which is more than most of this market can say, but the terms themselves offer a British player no route beyond the operator’s own final word, delivered in exactly those words.
What players are reporting
The record is small and poor. Across a handful of review listings the brand averages in the mid-twos out of five from a few dozen reviews, and the harshest recent account, from March 2026, is specific: a player says the casino “paid me once to my bank, then kept refusing withdrawals under the pretence that i had done something wrong with my bank details”, filed under the one-word title “Thieves”. Formal complaint cases add texture: one records a £1,700 withdrawal outstanding after five days; another describes a withdrawal unprocessed for three weeks that stretched past two months. A UK player was asking solicitors about unpaid winnings from the casino as far back as March 2024. I found no comparable trail of players reporting smooth payouts to set against this.
Around that record sits familiar noise: several unofficial “UK edition” lookalike sites trading on the name, and planted write-ups on unrelated websites, including a “sincere review” attributed to a well-known ratings platform but hosted on a guitar-tuition site. Weigh it all against the paperwork I’ve quoted and the picture is coherent: an operator whose documents give it the final word on disputes, exercising it. The licence being verifiable tells you who they are; it doesn’t tell you they’ll pay.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- A licence that verifies: named operator, company number, address, and a register entry that matches the terms.
- Published bonus mechanics, the 40x welcome stated on the offer itself, and a separate bonus wallet that never locks your cash.
- A written complaints procedure with working email addresses, plus 24/7 chat.
- A focused, well-organised casino that chose to drop its sportsbook rather than sprawl.
What I don’t
- Clause 13.14 bars UK players from every bonus, with winnings voidable if one is claimed anyway, while registration from Britain stays open.
- Complaints end at the operator’s own inbox: “Our decision in this matter is final. In other words, what we say goes.” No ADR, and a six-month claim window.
- Recent, specific withdrawal refusal complaints against a small, low-scoring review base.
- Withdrawals capped at £2,000 a day and £5,000 a week; 40x welcome wagering, four times the UK cap.
- A stale licence number in the footer, no verification seal, and unofficial UK lookalike sites muddying the name.
My Betzino verdict: the paperwork checks out, and reads against you
Betzino earns something few casinos in its market do: basic credibility. The operator is named, the licence number in the terms matches a register entry you can find, the bonus mechanics are printed where players can read them, and the company has grown at a deliberate two-casinos-in-four-years pace. If every Curaçao operator did this much, my job would be duller. But credibility means the documents deserve to be taken at their word, and their word, for a British reader, is this: you’re excluded from every bonus on the site while your money is welcome; any dispute ends at the operator’s own final decision, “in other words, what we say goes”; claims expire after six months; and withdrawals are metered at £5,000 a week. The recent player record, refusals after a first successful payout, months-long complaint cases, reads like those clauses in operation, not in spite of them.
So the UK position writes itself: this is a casino whose own terms have already told you that you’re not the customer its offers are for, backed by no UK licence and none of Britain’s protections. If Betzino’s tidy slots-and-live formula appeals, PlayOJO runs the same category of casino on a UK licence with wager-free rewards a British player can actually claim, and the alternatives above offer two more routes. Respect Betzino for showing its paperwork; believe the paperwork when it tells you to play elsewhere.
Betzino sister sites FAQ: your questions answered
What are Betzino’s sister sites?
Just one: Amon Casino, the Egyptian-themed casino Purple Bay B.V. launched in November 2023. Purple Bay operates only these two sites, making this one of the smallest casino families we’ve covered. The other brands on this page, PlayOJO, All British Casino and Sky Vegas, are UK-licensed alternatives, not sister sites.
Who owns Betzino?
Purple Bay B.V., a company registered in Curaçao under number 157944, based at Fransche Bloemweg 4, Willemstad. It holds Curaçao Gaming Control Board licence OGL/2024/1368/0895, cited in Betzino’s terms and matching the regulator’s register, and it runs its own affiliate programme under the Purple Bay name.
Does Betzino’s licence check out?
The licence verifies: Purple Bay B.V. appears in the Curaçao Gaming Authority’s register, and the number in the terms matches. Two caveats: the site’s footer still displays an outdated licence number from Curaçao’s old master-licence era with no clickable seal, and a Curaçao licence, verified or not, provides none of the protections of a UK Gambling Commission licence.
Is Betzino legal for UK players?
No. Offering gambling to people in Britain requires a UK Gambling Commission licence, which Betzino doesn’t hold. Its site accepts UK visitors and registrations, but clause 13.14 of its own terms excludes the United Kingdom from every bonus, and a UK player there has no GAMSTOP, no affordability checks, no independent complaints route and no funds protection.
Which Betzino website is the official one?
betzino.com is the casino. Several unofficial lookalike sites present themselves as Betzino’s “UK edition” on British-facing domains, quoting details that contradict the operator’s own site. Treat any “Betzino UK” site as unofficial: the operator holds no UK licence and runs no UK edition.