
Rainbow Riches Casino sister sites in a nutshell
Rainbow Riches Casino is a UK-licensed brand built around the country’s most famous slot series, and its sister sites are some of the biggest names in British online gambling: Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino and Double Bubble Bingo. They’re sister sites in the fullest sense, all run by Gamesys Operations Limited on the same UK Gambling Commission licence, account 38905, part of the Bally’s group.

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At a glance
Brand reviewed
Rainbow Riches Casino (rainbowrichescasino.com), launched 2019
Operator
Gamesys Operations Limited (Gibraltar), part of the Bally’s group
UKGC account
38905 (Rainbow Riches Casino is a white-label domain on it)
UK status
UK-licensed and GAMSTOP-registered; legitimate for UK players
Games
The full Rainbow Riches slot series, plus slots, Slingo, bingo, live casino
Welcome offer
Deposit and play £10, get 30 free spins, no wagering requirements
Best sister sites
Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino, Double Bubble Bingo
Last checked
14 July 2026
The Rainbow Riches Casino sister sites
The Gambling Commission register explains the family in one glance: thirteen domains sit under Gamesys account 38905, and the top brands among them are Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino and Double Bubble Bingo. Some are Gamesys’s own brands (Jackpotjoy, Bally Casino, Double Bubble Bingo) and some are white-labels that put a famous name on the same licence (Monopoly Casino, Virgin Games and Rainbow Riches Casino itself). Alongside this brand sit its closest cousins by theme, the other Rainbow Riches front-ends on the same licence: Rainbow Riches Bingo and Rainbow Slots, near-identical variants pointed at bingo and slots players respectively. Because these all share one operator and one licence, they also share the important things: your account, your deposit limits and your self-exclusion apply across the family, not per site. The five brands below are the sister sites worth knowing.


Jackpotjoy
- The flagship of the family: Gamesys’s own bingo-led brand and the most heavily backed on the licence, the natural first stop if bingo is your reason for being here.
- Bingo first, slots second: A deep bingo schedule with slots and Slingo alongside, where Rainbow Riches Casino runs it the other way round.
- Same licence, same rules: Identical UKGC cover and the shared account, limits and self-exclusion that apply across every brand here.
- The network’s headline name: If you’ve heard of one brand in this family, it’s almost certainly this one.
- Who it suits: Bingo players who want the biggest room in the group; full write-up linked below.

Virgin Games
- The other famous-name white-label: Like Rainbow Riches Casino, it borrows a household brand and runs on the Gamesys engine underneath.
- Its own signatures: A Jackpot Blast side-bet feature and Daily Free Games with cash prizes up to £750, a step beyond this brand’s daily rewards.
- Virgin loyalty crossover: Ties into the wider Virgin Red rewards world, which none of the other Rainbow Riches Casino sister sites can offer.
- Same payment habits: Like the rest of the family, it drops PayPal and e-wallets for new accounts.
- Who it suits: Players who want a big, familiar all-rounder with a rewards angle.

Monopoly Casino
- The closest structural match: The other big licensed-name white-label, built the same way Rainbow Riches Casino is, around a single iconic brand.
- Theme done properly: The Monopoly board runs through the games and rewards rather than sitting as a logo on a generic lobby, much as the Rainbow Riches theme does here.
- Monopoly-branded slots: Its own shelf of Monopoly titles is the direct parallel to this casino’s Rainbow Riches shelf.
- Shared everything else: One operator, one licence, one set of account controls with its sister sites.
- Who it suits: Players who like a strong single-theme casino but prefer the Monopoly world to leprechauns.

Bally Casino
- The parent’s own casino: Named for Bally’s, the group that owns Gamesys, and the closest thing the family has to a house flagship on the casino side.
- The only one with a sportsbook: Alone in this family, it runs full sports betting, where Rainbow Riches Casino and the others are casino and bingo sites with smaller sportsbooks.
- Cards-only cashier: Payments limited to Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay and Google Pay, the same no-e-wallets stance as its sisters.
- Same licence and penalty history: It sits on the exact licence, 38905, that carries the 2023 UKGC sanction.
- Who it suits: Anyone in the family who also wants to bet on sports and casino games under one roof.

Double Bubble Bingo
- The themed bingo sibling: Gamesys’s own brand built around the Double Bubble slot, the bingo-flavoured answer to this casino’s slots focus.
- A choose-your-welcome offer: Deposit and play £10, then pick £25 in free bingo tickets or 30 free spins, and like the Rainbow Riches Casino welcome bonus, there’s no further wagering.
- 75, 80 and 90-ball rooms: A proper bingo spread wrapped around one signature slot theme.
- Quieter on promotions: Ongoing offers for existing players are small, a trait it shares with Rainbow Riches Casino.
- Who it suits: Casual bingo players who like a single strong theme and a wager-free start.
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: Personally tested from a UK connection. The live Rainbow Riches Casino site was read in full (homepage, the promotions page, welcome-offer rules, footer and licensing), and the UK Gambling Commission register entry for account 38905 was checked directly, including its domain list and enforcement record. A small deposit was made for the purpose of checking functionality.
Checked on: 14 July 2026, on a Windows laptop using Google Chrome
Operator: Gamesys Operations Limited, named in the site’s own footer, part of the Bally’s group; Rainbow Riches Casino is a white-label domain on its licence
UKGC account: 38905, verified live on the Gambling Commission register. View the entry.
Sources checked: The site’s homepage, promotions page and welcome offer rules (the wager-free free-spins terms); the footer licensing and operator statements; the UKGC register entry for 38905, its 13-domain list and its November 2023 sanction detail; and our own reviews of Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino and Double Bubble Bingo. Companies House: operator is a Gibraltar company, so not applicable.
Change log: 14 July 2026, first published version.

The whole Rainbow Riches series, under one roof
This is the part that truly sets the brand apart. Rainbow Riches is one of the most recognisable slot names in Britain, and the casino was built in 2019 to gather the entire series in one place. The lobby delivers on it: Rainbow Riches, Rainbow Riches Megaways, Pick ‘n’ Mix, Drops of Gold, Reels of Gold, Cluster Magic, Jackpot O’ Luck, Race Day, Rising Wins, Power Pitch, Crops of Cash and the Slingo crossover Slingo Rainbow Riches, with the Free Spins edition carrying a progressive jackpot that stood near £482,000 when I looked. If you specifically want the leprechaun, the pots of gold and the Road to Riches trail, this is the most complete single collection of them you’ll find.
Around that centrepiece is a full mainstream UK casino: hundreds of other slots including Barcrest and Light & Wonder favourites like Fluffy Favourites, Eye of Horus, Fishin’ Frenzy and 88 Fortunes, a Slingo section, live casino tables, and a proper bingo product. A note on the branding, though: the Rainbow Riches name and artwork belong to Barcrest, the game’s maker, and are licensed to the casino; the operator you’re actually contracting with is Gamesys. It’s a genuinely well-stocked home for the series, but the famous name on the door and the company behind the counter aren’t the same thing, which matters most when something goes wrong and you need to know who you’re dealing with.

Ownership, licensing and the UK position
The paperwork here is refreshingly clear. Rainbow Riches Casino’s footer names its operator outright: Gamesys Operations Limited, a Gibraltar company, licensed and regulated in Britain by the Gambling Commission under account 38905, with additional Gibraltar and Ireland licences. Gamesys was bought by the American casino group Bally’s in 2021, which is why the family includes a Bally Casino and why the site’s own copyright now reads for the Bally’s group. So the ownership runs cleanly from famous front-end to named operator to listed parent.
Being a real UK licence, that account is also a public accountability record, and it isn’t spotless. On 22 November 2023 the Gambling Commission sanctioned Gamesys Operations Limited with a financial penalty of £6,071,292, a formal warning and an extra condition on its licence, after finding anti-money-laundering and customer-interaction failings between November 2021 and July 2022. The Commission recorded that Gamesys co-operated with the investigation, took corrective steps, and that no criminal money was found among the customers reviewed. It’s a serious matter and worth knowing before you deposit; it’s also exactly the kind of enforcement that only exists because the operator sits inside the UK system, where a regulator can investigate, fine and impose conditions. That accountability is the thing every brand in this family offers and every offshore casino does not.
For a UK player the position is straightforward: this is a licensed, GAMSTOP-participating casino with real oversight behind it. The one structural point to hold onto is that the licence is shared. Your account, your deposit limits and your self-exclusion apply across all thirteen domains on account 38905, so a limit or a block set at Rainbow Riches Casino carries to Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games and the rest.

The welcome offer, and why “no wagering” matters
The welcome is simple and, by the standards of this market, actually player-friendly: deposit and wager £10 in cash on slots, opt in first, and you get 30 free spins on Rainbow Riches Pick ‘n’ Mix, at a 1p coin size across 10 lines, with 30 days to use them. The reason it’s worth singling out is in the rules themselves: the free spins carry no wagering requirements, and anything you win from them is withdrawable straight away. In a market where welcome bonuses usually lock winnings behind a playthrough, a wager-free offer means the small print isn’t cancelling the prize. Since January 2026, UK casino bonus wagering is capped at 10 times anyway, so no legitimate UK brand can pile on the old inflated multiples; this one goes a step further and asks for nothing at all on the spins.
Beyond the welcome, the ongoing promotions are honest but modest: a daily free game (Rainbow Riches Daily Rainbows) for players who’ve deposited at least £10, a “Big Daily Giveaway”, a refer-a-friend paying up to £100 across a maximum of five friends, and a free-to-play slot tournament that runs across the group’s UK sites rather than this one alone. The bingo-side welcome was withdrawn from new members in March 2026. None of it is lavish, and existing player rewards are on the thin side, but nothing here is designed to trap a deposit, which is the trade most UK brands now make and the right one.

Deposits, withdrawals and the cashier
The cashier is where this family shows its one consistent limitation. Deposits and withdrawals run on cards (Visa and Mastercard) plus Apple Pay and Google Pay, and that’s pretty much it: PayPal, e-wallets like Skrill and Neteller, and open banking aren’t offered to new members, a restriction that holds across Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Bally Casino and the rest. If a wallet is how you prefer to move money, this whole group will disappoint you. Minimum deposit is £10, in line with the welcome.
The better news is on the way out. Rainbow Riches Casino advertises free withdrawals with no cashout fee, Visa payouts run to a high per-transaction ceiling, and the brand leans on “keep what you win” and fast, free withdrawals as selling points, which the wager-free welcome backs up rather than contradicts. Verification is the standard UK KYC on first withdrawal. For me, it’s all a bit limited on methods, particularly the missing wallets, but clean and quick on the fundamentals of getting paid, with none of the discretionary withholding clauses that litter offshore terms.
Support and complaints
Support runs through a help centre and live chat, backed by the operator’s contact channels, with the site advertising 24/7 customer support. As a mainstream Gamesys brand, the day-to-day service is what you’d expect of a large UK operation rather than a bare-bones offshore desk.
Complaints are where a UK licence changes the picture. If the casino can’t resolve a dispute, you have a real route beyond it: an independent alternative dispute resolution provider, and ultimately the Gambling Commission as regulator, neither of which exists for an unlicensed site. This is the practical value of the licence that sits behind all the family branding, a free, independent path that can hold the operator to a decision.
What players make of it
The general run of player feedback is positive, and consistent about why. People like that the welcome does what it says, that winnings from the free spins aren’t clawed back, and that withdrawals are quick and free; the mobile app in particular draws strong ratings from a large pool of users. The recurring gripe is the cashier’s narrowness, the lack of PayPal and e-wallets, which comes up again and again from players who assumed a brand this size would offer them. As casino sentiment goes, it’s a solidly-liked mainstream product rather than a divisive one.
The shadow over that record is the same one the regulator acted on. Historic complaints centred on affordability and account checks, players able to deposit heavily before the operator intervened, are precisely the failings behind the 2023 penalty, and they’re worth weighing rather than waving away. The counterpoint is that this is a licensed operator that was investigated, fined and made to change, with an extra licence condition to prove it.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- A UK Gambling Commission licence, GAMSTOP and a real independent complaints route behind it.
- A wager-free welcome, with free-spin winnings you keep and can withdraw straight away.
- The most complete home for the Rainbow Riches series anywhere, plus a full mainstream casino around it.
- Clear ownership, free withdrawals, and famous, well-reviewed sister sites.
What I don’t
- No PayPal or e-wallets for new members, a limitation shared across the whole family.
- Few ongoing promotions once the welcome is done.
- A £6.07m 2023 UKGC penalty against the operator for AML and affordability failings.
- A white-label setup where the famous name on the door isn’t the company you’re actually contracting with.
My Rainbow Riches Casino verdict: keep what you win, know who you’re with
Rainbow Riches Casino is what you’d hope for it to be: a properly UK-licensed brand that names its operator, joins GAMSTOP, and runs a welcome that hands back what you win instead of burying it under a playthrough. If you love the Rainbow Riches slots, there is no better single home for them, and the family around it, Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino, Double Bubble Bingo, is a roster of proven UK names rather than a fog of clones. The only caveats are ordinary ones: a cashier with no wallets, few ongoing promotions, and an operator whose 2023 penalty is a black mark on the licence, weighed against the fact that the licence is exactly what let a regulator hold it to account.
So my recommendation is a straightforward one for a change. If the Rainbow Riches series is your reason to play and you’re happy paying by card, this is a legitimate, transparent place to do it, with the protections a UK player should insist on. Just go in knowing the name is a licensed theme, the operator is Gamesys, the parent is Bally’s, and your account and limits reach right across the family. Among these sister sites, pick by what you actually want to play: bingo points you at Jackpotjoy, sport at Bally Casino, and the leprechaun keeps you right here.
Rainbow Riches Casino sister sites FAQ: your questions answered
What are Rainbow Riches Casino’s sister sites?
Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games, Monopoly Casino, Bally Casino and Double Bubble Bingo, all run by Gamesys Operations Limited on the same UK Gambling Commission licence, account 38905. The register lists thirteen domains on that account in total, including other Rainbow Riches fronts like Rainbow Riches Bingo and Rainbow Slots.
Who owns Rainbow Riches Casino?
It’s operated by Gamesys Operations Limited, a Gibraltar company licensed in Britain under account 38905, and the site makes this clear in its footer. Gamesys is owned by the casino group Bally’s. The Rainbow Riches name itself is licensed from Barcrest, the maker of the slot series.
Is Rainbow Riches Casino legal and safe for UK players?
Yes. It holds a full UK Gambling Commission licence, takes part in GAMSTOP, and offers an independent complaints route and the regulator behind it. The operator did receive a 2023 UKGC penalty for past failings, which is worth knowing, but the brand is legitimate and UK-regulated.
Does the Rainbow Riches Casino welcome offer have wagering requirements?
No. Deposit and play £10 on slots, opt in first, and you get 30 free spins on Rainbow Riches Pick ‘n’ Mix with no wagering requirements, so any winnings are yours to withdraw. Since January 2026 UK bonus wagering is capped at 10 times in any case, but this offer asks for nothing at all on the spins.
Can I use PayPal at Rainbow Riches Casino?
Not as a new member. The cashier runs on Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay and Google Pay, with no PayPal, e-wallets or open banking, and that limitation applies across the whole Gamesys family, including Jackpotjoy, Virgin Games and Bally Casino. Withdrawals are advertised as free.