
Vegas Moose sister sites in a nutshell
Vegas Moose isn’t a standalone casino, and it isn’t a Jumpman-owned brand either. It’s a white-label site running on Jumpman Gaming Limited‘s UK licence, account 39175, and it moved onto that platform recently after the Small Screen Casinos network it used to sit on began winding down. That means its real sister sites are the roughly 130 other white-label brands on the same Jumpman setup, all sharing one cashier, one bonus engine and one support team. Below, I’ll separate the Jumpman brands worth knowing from the dozens of near-identical clones, and flag the one shared-network catch that matters most before you deposit.

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At a glance
Brand reviewed
Vegas Moose
Operator
Jumpman Gaming Limited
UKGC account
39175
Relationship type
White-label brand
UK status
Licensed for Britain
Network siblings
130 white-label brands
Welcome offer
20 no-deposit spins, 10x wagering
Last checked
5 June 2026
Same platform, different paint jobs
Jumpman runs one of the biggest white-label operations in the UK. More than a hundred brands sit on its licence, and the vast majority share the same lobby layout, the same Daily Wheel, the same bonus rules and the same cashier down to the last clause. Picking between most of them is like choosing a colour, not a casino. A smaller group, though, have built enough of a name that they’re worth treating as proper reference points. The five profiles below cover the Jumpman brands that offer the best alternatives, so you can see how Vegas Moose stacks up against its sister sites. None of these is “owned by” the same people as Vegas Moose in the way a true sister site would be. They’re platform matches under the same operator, which is a different and weaker tie, but it’s the accurate one.


Dove Slots
- Relationship: A popular Vegas Moose sister site.
- Standing: One of the longer-running, better-known Jumpman brands, with a softer, calmer look than the moose’s cartoon style.
- Where it overlaps: Identical cashier, identical 10x bonus terms, identical conversion cap and the same Daily Wheel mechanic.
- What feels different: Mostly branding and game-shelf curation. The machinery underneath is the same.
- My read: If you like the Jumpman setup but find Vegas Moose a bit shouty, this is the more established, lower-key version of the same thing.

Amazon Slots
- Relationship: One of the best-established Vegas Moose sister sites.
- Recognisability: Amazon Slots is among the most heavily marketed names on the network, so it’s the Jumpman site many players will have seen advertised.
- Identity: A rainforest theme that’s a touch more grown-up than the moose’s gag, though it’s still skin over the same engine.
- What overlaps: Same slot library, same banking list, same wagering and the same eCOGRA complaints route.
- Takeaway: Pick it if you’d rather sign up to the familiar, well-advertised Jumpman name. There’s no value gain over Vegas Moose.

Aladdin Slots
- Relationship: Another Vegas Moose sister site.
- Identity: A genie-and-lamp theme that leans on its own character the way Vegas Moose leans on the moose.
- The catch: A self-exclusion or affordability cap set here applies to Vegas Moose too, since it’s all one operator underneath.
- What overlaps: Same suppliers, same 10x wagering, same lifetime-deposit conversion cap, same Daily Wheel.
- Practical takeaway: A like-for-like swap on theme alone. Choose it only if the genie appeals more than the moose.

Slots Baby
- Relationship: A white-label Jumpman brand.
- Identity: A cheeky, playful tone that’s chasing the same casual, mobile-first crowd Vegas Moose wants.
- Where it overlaps: Same cashier, same minimum £10 deposit, same bonus maths and the same support setup.
- What feels different: Just the wrapper and the voice. Nothing in the terms moves in your favour by switching.
- Best for: Players who want a livelier-feeling skin but don’t mind that it’s the same product.

Mr Wolf Slots
- Relationship: Another Jumpman brand and the closest in spirit to Vegas Moose, because it’s the other animal-mascot site on the network.
- Closest match: A cartoon wolf instead of a cartoon moose, which makes this the most direct mascot-to-mascot comparison in the whole Jumpman estate.
- What overlaps: Identical platform, identical wagering, identical conversion cap and the same banking options.
- What’s different: Character and tone only. The wolf is the personality; the casino behind it is standard issue.
- My read: If your choice really does come down to the mascot, this is the head-to-head. Pick the animal you’d rather see on the reels.
Which one suits you?
If you want the most established sibling
Dove Slots is the longer-running, calmer Jumpman brand. Same engine and terms, less cartoon noise.
If you want the most familiar name
Amazon Slots is the heavily advertised one most players recognise. No value gain, just a name you’ve likely seen.
If it’s really about the mascot
Mr Wolf Slots is the direct rival to the moose. Same casino underneath, so pick the animal you prefer.
What “white-label” actually means to you
The UK Gambling Commission register lists Vegas Moose as a white-label domain, which is the important term. Jumpman owns and runs the licence, the platform and the cashier. The Vegas Moose brand, the moose mascot and the marketing are the front-end skin, run by a separate marketing partner. You’re depositing with Jumpman whichever button you click.
Two practical consequences follow. First, your safer gambling controls work at network level: a self-exclusion or an affordability deposit threshold applied on one Jumpman site applies across all of them within 24 hours, so you can’t sidestep a limit by hopping to a sibling. Second, the recent migration. Vegas Moose came over as the Small Screen Casinos network wound down, so it’s a relatively fresh face on Jumpman even if the name has been around a while. Its history doesn’t transfer cleanly, which is one more reason to judge it on Jumpman’s current terms rather than any past reputation.
One more thing worth knowing: Jumpman discloses that customer balances are held in a separate client account but are Not Protected in the event of insolvency, the UKGC’s lowest tier. That’s common across the network, but it’s still a reason not to leave a large balance sitting in your account.

Ownership, licensing and the UK position
Vegas Moose is legal for players in Britain. It’s operated by Jumpman Gaming Limited, based at La Corvee House, Alderney, under UKGC account 39175, with the Alderney Gambling Control Commission covering non-UK customers. The register shows no regulatory actions against Jumpman, which is a good record for an operator running this many brands.
The caveat is that there’s no separate “Vegas Moose company” to hold accountable. Accountability, complaints, withdrawals and verification all sit with Jumpman. If something goes wrong, you’re dealing with the operator behind a hundred-plus sites, not a boutique casino with its own support desk.
On the plus side, that scale brings consistency and a clear, if strict, set of rules. On the minus side, it brings the standard Jumpman small print: a £5 monthly dormancy fee after 365 days of inactivity, network-wide self-exclusion, and bonus terms that are uniform across the estate.
The welcome offer, and the conversion cap that defines it
The headline is a no-deposit deal: 20 free spins on Big Bass Splash, no deposit needed, with a valid debit card registration required to claim. The spins carry 10x wagering, which sits right at the current UK maximum.
The detail that really shapes the value is the conversion cap. For players who’ve never deposited, the most you can ever convert from bonus winnings to withdrawable cash is £50, full stop. Once you’ve deposited, the cap rises to match your lifetime deposits, up to a maximum of £250. So if you turn those free spins into £400 of bonus funds but have only deposited £50, you walk away with £50 and the rest is wiped. That’s not a hidden trap, it’s written plainly in the terms, but it’s the single most important number to understand before you get excited about a big bonus balance.
Beyond the welcome, expect deposit-linked spins on Big Bass Splash and similar Pragmatic and Blueprint titles, a minimum £10 deposit on promotional offers, and the Daily Wheel. Real money is always staked before bonus funds, bonus money can never itself be withdrawn, and table games, live casino and progressive jackpots don’t count towards wagering. It’s a tightly controlled bonus system, fair enough on disclosure, but built so the house keeps the maths firmly in its favour.
Payments, withdrawals and KYC
The cashier is clearly laid out. Deposits work via Visa Debit, Mastercard Debit, Maestro, Paysafe Card, Pay by Mobile, PayPal, Neteller and Skrill, with a £10 minimum deposit. Pay by Mobile carries a £2.50 transaction fee and can’t be used for withdrawals, which is the one charge to watch. You can hold up to three cards, and every method must be in your own name.
Withdrawals are paid within the normal banking cycle once any pending period clears, typically 1 to 5 working days to reach your bank. Closed-loop rules apply, and your first withdrawal triggers full KYC: ID, a recent utility bill, and sometimes a card check with the middle digits covered. Once documents are verified, pending withdrawals are processed within 24 hours; if documents are rejected, the request bounces back to your balance within 48 hours.
The payment range is good for a white-label brand, and the rules are spelt out clearly. The friction points are predictable: get verified early to avoid first-withdrawal delays, avoid Pay by Mobile if you want a fee-free deposit you can also withdraw to, and don’t leave funds dormant given the £5 monthly inactivity fee and the Not Protected funds status.
The moose is the personality, the slots are standard issue
The whimsical cartoon moose is the whole brand identity, and credit where it’s due, it gives Vegas Moose a friendlier, more memorable face than a lot of its faceless network cousins. The tone is light, the mascot does the heavy lifting, and the Vegas-meets-wilderness gag is at least a hook you’ll remember.
The games behind it, though, are the same Jumpman shelf you’ll find network-wide: a slots-first library of around 600-plus titles built around Pragmatic, Blueprint and Eyecon hits like Big Bass Splash, Fluffy Favourites, Gates of Olympus and Fishin’ Frenzy, plus 90-ball bingo and a sprinkling of casino games. There’s no exclusive content that the moose unlocks.
That’s the top and bottom of it: a charming wrapper around a standard product. If the mascot makes the experience more fun for you, that’s a real, if small, plus. Just don’t expect the theme to come with better games, better odds or better terms than the plainer brands on the same platform.
Support and complaints
Support is the standard Jumpman setup, which means email-led rather than a slick multi-channel desk. There’s an on-site FAQ and a “Get In Touch” route, but no phone number, and the contact address is the shared network one.
General support email: support@jumpmangaming.com
Complaints email: complaints@jumpmangaming.com
Customer support phone: No customer support phone number
ADR: eCOGRA, free to use, after the internal complaint stage or if unresolved within 8 weeks
The complaints path is clear: raise it within six months, expect acknowledgement within 48 hours and a determination within eight weeks, then escalate to eCOGRA on deadlock. Because this is a shared platform, keep evidence specific to your own account: username, the exact offer you claimed, screenshots of the free spins and any bonus balance, your withdrawal request and its pending status, every KYC message, and the dates throughout. The most likely disputes here are the conversion cap surprising people who expected to keep a big bonus win, first-withdrawal verification delays, and confusion over which funds are real versus bonus.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- A memorable mascot that gives the brand more character than most white-label clones.
- A wide payment list, including PayPal, Skrill, Neteller and Paysafe.
- Clean, fully disclosed terms and a clear complaints route to eCOGRA.
- The backing of an established operator with no regulatory actions on record.
What I don’t
- The conversion cap, tied to lifetime deposits with £50 for non-depositors, quietly limits any big bonus win.
- It’s one of roughly 130 near-identical Jumpman brands, so there’s little that’s truly its own.
- Customer funds are held at the Not Protected level, and a £5 monthly dormancy fee applies after a year idle.
- No phone support, and the contact email is the shared network address, not a dedicated one.
My Vegas Moose verdict: a likeable face on a very crowded platform
Vegas Moose is simple once you see what it is. Since it’s a white-label brand sharing everything but its mascot with around 130 Jumpman cousins, the choice between it and the others comes down almost entirely to which theme you enjoy. If the moose makes you smile, fine, it’s as good a Jumpman site as any, with a wide cashier and clearly written rules. But go in understanding the conversion cap, because that, not the wagering, is what decides how much of a bonus win you actually keep, and it’s why no-deposit players are working towards a £50 ceiling. If you want the same comfortable Jumpman feel with a steadier, more established name, Dove Slots is the pick. If you want the most recognisable brand on the network, Amazon Slots is it. And if the whole decision really does come down to the mascot, Mr Wolf Slots is the head-to-head with the moose. Vegas Moose is fun, fairly run and perfectly fine. Just don’t mistake the mascot for something the platform isn’t.
Vegas Moose sister sites FAQ: your questions answered
Does Vegas Moose have sister sites?
Yes. It’s a white-label brand on Jumpman Gaming’s licence, so its sister sites are the roughly 130 other Jumpman platform brands, including Dove Slots, Amazon Slots, Aladdin Slots, Slots Baby and Mr Wolf Slots.
Who operates Vegas Moose?
Jumpman Gaming Limited, based in Alderney, under UKGC account 39175. The Alderney Gambling Control Commission covers non-UK customers.
Is Vegas Moose legal for UK players?
Yes. It runs on Jumpman’s UK Gambling Commission licence, which has no regulatory actions on record.
What does white-label mean here?
Jumpman provides the licence, platform and cashier, while the Vegas Moose name and moose mascot are the front-end skin. You’re really depositing with Jumpman.
Why did Vegas Moose join the Jumpman network?
It moved onto Jumpman recently after the Small Screen Casinos network it previously sat on began closing down.
What is the Vegas Moose welcome offer?
20 free spins on Big Bass Splash with no deposit, claimed after registering a valid debit card. The spins carry 10x wagering.
How much can I actually win from the no-deposit spins?
If you never deposit, bonus winnings convert to a maximum of £50 cash. Once you deposit, the cap rises to match your lifetime deposits, up to £250.
How do I deposit and withdraw at Vegas Moose?
Deposits include Visa, Mastercard, Maestro, Paysafe, Pay by Mobile, PayPal, Neteller and Skrill, minimum £10. Withdrawals take 1 to 5 working days, and Pay by Mobile can’t be used to withdraw.
Are my funds protected at Vegas Moose?
Funds are held separately but rated Not Protected, the UKGC’s lowest tier, so it’s wise not to leave a large balance in your account.
How do I contact Vegas Moose support?
By email at support@jumpmangaming.com, with complaints to complaints@jumpmangaming.com and eCOGRA as the ADR. There’s no published phone number.