
Sister Sites Guide
Videoslots is the flagship brand on the Videoslots Limited licence, and it behaves like one. It’s not, however, the best-looking member of the family, and it’s certainly not the quietest. It’s the full warehouse version: slots, live casino, jackpots, sportsbook, arcade games, tournaments, boosters and enough moving parts to make the smaller casinos look like side projects.
If you’re here for sister sites – which I presume you are – then you’ll find that Videoslots has two proper UK sister sites: Mr Vegas and Mega Riches. The UKGC licence list also shows www.videoslots.co.uk and www.videoslots.com, but that’s not a second brand. The .co.uk address is superfluous, so the true family is really just Videoslots, Mr Vegas and Mega Riches.
The Videoslots sister sites in a nutshell
Videoslots is operated by Videoslots Limited, UKGC account 39380. The sister sites are Mr Vegas and Mega Riches. Those are the two separate casino brands sitting beside Videoslots on the licence.
The choice is simple. Mr Vegas is the cleaner, more engineered sibling. Mega Riches is the noisier jackpot-and-bonus brand. Videoslots itself is the big all-in-one flagship, with the deepest feature set and the most obvious sense of scale.
At a glance
Brand reviewed
Video Slots
Operator
Videoslots Limited
UKGC account
39380
UK status
Licensed for Britain
Official sister sites
Mr Vegas and Mega Riches
Main active domains
videoslots.com, videoslots.co.uk, mrvegas.com, megariches.com
Welcome bonus structure
Deposit bonus released in stages, plus wager-free bonus spins
Last checked
27 April 2026
The only Videoslots sister sites worth comparing
This is a small family, which makes it easier to keep track of. Mr Vegas and Mega Riches are the two comparison points, and they represent two different attempts to make the operator framework feel less like the giant Video Slots machine.


Mr Vegas
- Identity: The polished casino sister site, built to make the product base feel cleaner, smarter and more deliberately styled.
- Best for: Players who like the operator’s game range but find Videoslots itself too busy and too feature-heavy.
- What feels similar: Same Videoslots Limited UKGC account, same casino and sportsbook base, and a very similar underlying product spread.
- What feels different: Mr Vegas has a sharper design personality, while Video Slots feels more like a giant casino control room with every switch left on.
- Why it matters: It’s the best sister site if your problem with Video Slots is presentation rather than substance.

Mega Riches
- Identity: The louder jackpot and rewards brand, with a more obvious “big win” pitch than either Videoslots or Mr Vegas.
- Best for: Players who like jackpot chasing, sports tie-ins, bonus features and a less restrained casino mood.
- What feels similar: Same Videoslots Limited licence, same casino and sportsbook shape, and many of the same category coverage.
- What feels different: Mega Riches pushes bonuses, jackpots, WinBooster, and its Wheel of Riches idea much harder than Videoslots’ more general all-in-one pitch.
- Why it matters: It’s the sister site to go for if Video Slots feels fine but not quite promotional enough for your taste.
Why videoslots.co.uk isn’t a third sister site
The UKGC record includes both www.videoslots.com and www.videoslots.co.uk, but the .co.uk version feeds into the main Videoslots site. There isn’t a secret secondary version of the same brand hiding on the network.
The network is really much simpler: Video Slots is the flagship, Mr Vegas is the cleaner sibling, and Mega Riches is the jackpot-and-rewards brand. Anything beyond that either belongs to another jurisdiction or doesn’t help a UK player choose where to play.

Best picks by player type
Best if you want the biggest casino in the family
Video Slots is still the main event if you want the widest feature set, the most obvious scale and the fullest version of the operator’s casino machinery.
Best if you want a cleaner casino experience
Mr Vegas is the better move if Video Slots feels too much like a warehouse and you want the same operator base with a tidier design.
Best if you want more jackpot opportunities
Mega Riches is the choice if the jackpots and rewards matter more than elegance.
Ownership and licensing
Video Slots is legal for players in Britain. It’s operated by Videoslots Limited, UKGC account 39380, with a registered head office at The Space, Level 2/3, Alfred Craig Street, Pieta, PTA 1320, Malta.
The UKGC licence has active remote permissions for casino, bingo, general betting standard real event and linked gambling software. The current active domains include www.videoslots.com, www.videoslots.co.uk, www.mrvegas.com and www.megariches.com.
The unfortunate part I have to report on is the regulatory record. Videoslots Limited has two UKGC actions. In June 2023, the operator agreed a settlement after AML and safer-gambling failings, including a £2 million payment in lieu of a financial penalty. In October 2025, the Commission imposed a £650,000 financial penalty, a warning and an additional licence condition after further AML and customer-interaction failings.
These failings don’t make Video Slots illegal or off-limits for UK players. The licence is still active. But for me, two UKGC actions on the same operator record combine to create quite a large red flag. They’re a real trust issue, especially when the brand itself sells scale and sophistication.
The welcome bonus might not work the way you want it to
Video Slots doesn’t present its welcome deposit bonus like a simple “here’s £X, now wager Y” offer. The key mechanic is the release structure. The welcome deposit bonus is available to newly registered players after an initial deposit, and once activated, the full bonus is released through 10 tranches.
To receive the maximum deposit bonus available under the offer you’ve activated, you need to wager 10x the initial deposit during the use period. Each 1x step releases another 10% of the initial deposit as bonus money.
The use period for the welcome deposit bonus is 60 calendar days from activation, unless a specific offer says otherwise. You have 30 days to activate the welcome deposit bonus. The max single wager while playing with a bonus is the lower of 50% of the bonus amount or £20. Roulette, blackjack and video poker contribute only 10% towards wagering, while progressive jackpot games don’t count towards bonus wagering at all.
The extra welcome spins are easier to like. New players who make a minimum initial deposit of £10 within 24 hours of registration receive eleven welcome spins, and those spins are wager-free. They have a 24 hour use period once activated.
My take is that Videoslots’ bonus design is clever, but not all that rewarding. I like the wager-free spins more than the tranche-based deposit bonus. The slow-release approach certainly won’t please everybody, and I can’t see a good reason not to give an option to simply take the whole thing at once.
Payments, withdrawals and KYC
Video Slots’ terms list deposit methods including Visa, Visa Electron, Mastercard, Skrill, Euteller and Neteller. The minimum deposit is £10. Deposits are processed immediately when a payment service provider is used, and the site says there are no processing fees except for Euteller, where a 1.95% fee applies.
The minimum withdrawal is £20 for all payment methods, including bank transfers. If you want to withdraw less than that, the terms say you need to contact support and a 3.95% processing fee applies. Bank wire withdrawals are free, although your bank may still charge its own fee.
Withdrawals normally go back through the same method used to deposit. If you win more than £30,000, or the equivalent in pounds, non-progressive winnings must be paid by bank transfer. Progressive jackpot wins of £50,000 or more can take up to 30 working days to process.
The site holds customer funds at the UKGC’s medium protection level, meaning player money is held separately from company funds but isn’t absolutely guaranteed if the business fails. That’s normal enough, but it’s still worth understanding before leaving a large balance sitting there.
KYC is exactly as strict as you’d expect after the operator’s regulatory history. Videoslots can refuse payments or wagers until identity has been verified, and it can ask for identity documents when electronic verification isn’t enough. If you’re using any of the sister sites as well, keep your details consistent across the family.
Why Video Slots still feels like the flagship
Videoslots doesn’t try to be tasteful in the same way Mr Vegas does. It tries to be enormous. That’s the brand’s role in this tiny network. It gives you the full spread: video slots, table games, video poker, scratch cards, live casino, jackpots, sports, live sports and arcade-style extras.
The site’s own features tell the story. Battle of Slots, Clash of Spins, and The Wheel of Jackpots all point to a casino that wants regular play to feel layered with side events, tournaments, and reward mechanics. It’s less curated boutique and more everything-all-at-once.
The game categories are just as broad: live blackjack, live roulette, game shows, baccarat, jackpot slots, Megaways titles, Big Bass games, Mega Moolah, Dream Drop, Jackpot King, Slingo, keno, virtual sports and more. That’s the real reason Videoslots remains the flagship. If you’re choosing purely by range, it beats its sister sites.
The downside is the same as the strength. Videoslots can feel busy because it is busy. Mr Vegas exists partly because not every player wants the full warehouse experience. Mega Riches exists because some players want more jackpots to chase. Videoslots is the original machine room.
Support and complaints
Videoslots gives players several support routes. The customer service page offers live chat, a contact form, an FAQ area and a “Talk with us” route. The support email is support@videoslots.com.
Support route: Live chat, contact form, FAQ and talk-with-us option
Email: support@videoslots.com
Phone number: You can’t call the casino directly, but you can log a request for a callback
The complaints route is clear. Videoslots asks players to complain by email, acknowledges complaints immediately or within 24 hours, and if the issue isn’t resolved within 8 weeks, it issues a final decision or explains the next external route.
For UK players, the ADR provider is IBAS. The terms give the IBAS email as adjudication@ibas-uk.co.uk and the IBAS telephone number as 020 7347 5883. That’s a proper endpoint, though I’d still keep the paper trail very tidy before escalating.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- The sister site family is small and easy to understand: Mr Vegas and Mega Riches are the only real alternatives inside the UK.
- Videoslots has a huge product range, especially for slot players who want categories, jackpots, tournaments and side features.
- The bonus mechanics are unusual, and the welcome spins being wager-free is a plus.
- The minimum deposit is clearly stated at £10, and the minimum withdrawal is clearly stated at £20.
- IBAS is named as the ADR route for UK player disputes.
What I don’t
- The operator’s UKGC record has two regulatory actions, including a £2 million settlement in 2023 and a £650,000 penalty in 2025.
- The welcome deposit bonus is more complicated than a normal match offer because it’s released in tranches.
- The site can feel crowded compared with Mr Vegas.
- The £20 minimum withdrawal is higher than some UK casino rivals.
- A phone contact route is useful, but a clearly published phone number would be better.
My final verdict on Videoslots and its sister sites
Video Slots is still the flagship because it has the most of everything. The most games, the most features, the most moving parts and, frankly, the most noise. That makes it powerful, but not always pleasant. If you want the same operator without the full warehouse effect, Mr Vegas is the better choice. If you want the louder jackpot-and-rewards casino, Mega Riches is the prize pick. Videoslots itself is best for players who value scale above neatness, but the operator’s two UKGC actions mean I’d approach all of its brands with caution.
FAQs about Videoslots sister sites
Does Videoslots have sister sites?
Yes. The proper sister sites are Mr Vegas and Mega Riches.
Who operates Videoslots in Britain?
Videoslots is operated by Videoslots Limited under UKGC account 39380.
Is Videoslots legal for UK players?
Yes. Videoslots is licensed for Britain by the UK Gambling Commission.
Is videoslots.co.uk a separate sister site?
No. It redirects into the main Videoslots site, so it’s a domain route rather than a separate brand.
Which Videoslots sister site is best?
Mr Vegas is best if you want a cleaner casino feel. Mega Riches is better if you want more jackpot and bonus emphasis.
What’s unusual about the Videoslots welcome bonus?
The deposit bonus is released in 10 tranches as you wager, rather than being paid all at once. The full release requires 10x wagering on the initial deposit.
Has Videoslots had UKGC regulatory actions?
Yes. Videoslots Limited has two UKGC actions on its record: a 2023 settlement and a 2025 sanction that included a £650,000 financial penalty.