
Wild Dice Casino sister sites in a nutshell
Wild Dice Casino has three sister sites worth knowing: Mega Win, i24Slots and 666 Gambit. Establishing even that much took digging, because the company behind them all, Interactive Pro N.V. of Curaçao, keeps its name off its own casino websites and masks its domain records. The paperwork is patchy across the family too: Wild Dice Casino trades on an Anjouan Gaming licence from the Comoros, while 666 Gambit runs with no licence at all. Add a £4,500 welcome offer carrying 90x wagering and a terms book with clauses that tilt the table well beyond the usual offshore lean, and the shape is clear.

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The UK position: Wild Dice Casino holds an Anjouan Gaming licence from the Comoros and nothing from the UK Gambling Commission, and at least one of its sister sites holds no licence from anywhere. None of the family is part of GamStop, no British consumer protections or dispute routes apply, and none of these casinos has a lawful basis to serve players in Britain. Nothing here is a way around self-exclusion, and anyone on GamStop should treat every casino on this network as out of bounds.
At a glance
Brand reviewed
Wild Dice Casino
Operator
Interactive Pro N.V., Curaçao
Licence
Anjouan Gaming, Comoros
UK status
No UKGC licence, not on GamStop, off limits to UK players
Sister sites
Mega Win, i24Slots, 666 Gambit
Welcome package
200% up to £4,500 + 100 spins, 90x wagering
Withdrawals
£100 minimum, wires processed in one business day
Last checked
12 June 2026
A family its own parent won’t put a name to
Interactive Pro N.V. runs at least five casinos and would apparently prefer nobody knew, since its name appears nowhere on the sites themselves, not even buried in the terms and conditions, and the domain ownership records are masked on top. The family had to be pieced together from the outside, and with an operator this private, there may be more brands than those that are known. The three Wild Dice Casino sister sites with enough substance to profile properly are below, all described factually for the international markets they aim at, with the usual reminder that a different theme on the same operator never means different protection.


Mega Win
- The tie: A confirmed Interactive Pro N.V. casino, established as a sister site through the same external digging that unmasked the operator.
- What you find: A trimmed-down version of the family recipe, with fewer slots on the shelves and a quieter promotions calendar than its dice-branded sister site.
- Against Wild Dice Casino: Nothing here that Wild Dice Casino doesn’t already do, and less of most of it, which makes the bigger sister the family’s flagship by default.
- Small print alert: The bank-transfer-only withdrawal habit with waits of around five days has been the norm at this end of the family.
- Where it lands: The middle child: more visited than i24Slots, thinner than Wild Dice Casino, identical in what actually matters.

i24Slots
- The tie: Another confirmed Interactive Pro N.V. brand, sharing the same layout style and machinery as the rest of the stable.
- What you find: The family’s biggest bonus advertiser, with a four-deposit welcome ladder that scales with deposit size and tops out around £15,000 in theoretical bonus money.
- Against Wild Dice Casino: Where Wild Dice Casino piles everything onto one deposit, i24Slots spreads the bait across four, and both attach the kind of wagering that keeps the money theoretical.
- Small print alert: Ladders that reward £1,000 deposits with the biggest tiers are built to escalate spending, which deserves naming for what it is.
- Where it lands: The least visited of the original trio, distinguishable mainly by how its bonus bait is arranged.

666 Gambit
- The tie: The family’s 2025 addition, run from the same Interactive Pro N.V. stable and platform as Wild Dice Casino.
- What you find: The darkest costume in the wardrobe, trading on Number-of-the-Beast branding, with a two-deposit welcome advertising up to £3,000 and 100 free spins through a 300% match to £2,250 and a second 300% boost to £750.
- Against Wild Dice Casino: Its 50x wagering is lighter than its sister’s 90x, and its payouts match the one-business-day pace, but its paperwork is thinner still, because 666 Gambit runs without a licence from anywhere.
- Small print alert: Every penny of bonus money carries that universal 50x rule, five times the British legal ceiling, which drags the dazzling headline numbers back to earth.
- Where it lands: A decent early player review score from a small pool of reviews, an edgy theme, and no permit behind any of it.
An operator that keeps moving
Three behaviours define this family more than any theme. The first is anonymity: a licensed casino normally prints its operating company in the footer of every page, while these sites print nothing, and the WHOIS records that would identify the owner are deliberately obscured. The second is movement: Wild Dice Casino’s address has changed repeatedly within single years, trading at one point as wilddicecasino-play.com, before that as wilddice-casino.com, and currently through a -win variant of the name. The third is inconsistent paperwork: the flagship brand carries an Anjouan permit while 666 Gambit carries nothing at all, so the family’s relationship with licensing looks like an option it sometimes exercises rather than a principle it operates by. Casinos rotate addresses when their domains keep getting blocked in regulated countries, and the habits feed each other, because a company nobody can name is a company nobody can pursue when the address changes again. Whatever else is true of this stable, its owner has organised itself to be hard to find, and players should price that in before sending money to any of it.

Ownership, licensing and what an Anjouan licence gets you
The facts, as far as they can be established: Interactive Pro N.V. is registered in Curaçao, launched Wild Dice Casino in 2023, and holds a gaming permit not from Curaçao’s regulator but from Anjouan Gaming in the Comoros, one of the cheapest and quickest permits in the industry. That mismatch, a Curaçao company shopping its licence from a smaller island, usually signals an operator optimising for cost and speed rather than credibility, and it matters because Anjouan supervision is light: there’s no independent complaints body behind it, no funds-protection regime, and no meaningful threat hanging over an operator that decides not to honour its own terms. A licence of this kind makes a casino legal somewhere; it doesn’t make it answerable to anyone a player can reach. And the family doesn’t even hold that line consistently, since 666 Gambit, the 2025 addition, trades with no licence from any jurisdiction, which tells you how the operator ranks the paperwork’s importance.
For players in Britain, the position needs only one sentence: no UKGC licence, no GamStop, no lawful UK custom, full stop.
£4,500 on deposit one, and the 90x that takes it back
The welcome offer breaks the usual offshore mould in one way: instead of a ladder across five deposits, the whole 200% match up to £4,500, plus a package of 100 free spins, hangs on your first deposit alone. Collecting the full amount means putting £2,250 down on day one at a casino you’ve never used, which is its own commentary. Then comes the small print, and it’s the harshest number I’ve seen in an age: 90x wagering. Run the sums, and the offer stops being an offer. A maxed £4,500 bonus demands £405,000 through the games before withdrawal; even a modest £50 deposit producing £100 of bonus wants £9,000 of turnover. British casinos are capped at 10x by law, most offshore sites stop around 35x to 50x, and even Wild Dice Casino’s own unlicensed sister charges 50x, so 90x sits beyond everything, including the family’s own standards, a number that exists so the headline can exist while the payout almost never does.
The ongoing programme is built around losing and being partially refunded for it. Daily cashback is calculated from the previous day’s deposits and losses: a lower-tier player depositing £100 to £199 gets £10 back, scaling to £500 back on deposits of £5,000 or more, with higher tiers paying £15 to £750 across the same bands. A weekly bonus wheel guarantees some prize on every spin. Be clear-eyed about the economics: a rebate scheme priced by deposit size is a volume discount on losing, and it’s most generous to exactly the players who should be slowing down.
Above it all sits a seven-tier VIP ladder, Bronze, Chrome, Silver, Gold, Platinum, Diamond and Red Diamond, with maximum daily cashback rising from 25% to 100%, deposit bonuses from 5% to 30%, birthday bonuses and new-game spins from Silver, a dedicated manager from Gold, and faster withdrawals with higher limits from Platinum up. The catch is structural: the casino publishes no criteria for how anyone climbs the ladder, so every advertised perk hangs on a progression system the house operates in private. A loyalty scheme with secret rules isn’t a scheme; it’s a mirage.
Payments, withdrawals and the clauses around them
Deposits are the easy part, with a menu spanning cards, Google Pay, vouchers and e-wallets of the Neosurf and Neteller kind, bank transfer and a long list of cryptocurrencies. Withdrawals run through wire transfer, with processing pledged within one business day, or to crypto wallets in Bitcoin, Litecoin or Ethereum. That’s quicker on paper than much of the family, since Mega Win and i24Slots have limited players to bank-transfer-only withdrawals with waits of around five days, though 666 Gambit matches the one-day pace, and Wild Dice Casino deserves the credit for setting it.
The credit stops at the surrounding clauses. The minimum withdrawal is a steep £100, pricing smaller players out of taking their own money; a low monthly withdrawal ceiling sits in the terms, meaning a big win leaves the building in instalments at the casino’s pace; and two further rules deserve your full attention. One ties your maximum possible winnings to the total you’ve deposited, even when playing without any bonus, which quietly caps every lucky streak by how much you’ve previously lost. The other deducts from dormant accounts, with balances reduced or consumed entirely after six to twelve months of inactivity. Neither clause exists at any reputable casino.
Verification will arrive before money leaves, as everywhere, and the structural warning applies with extra force here: if anything in that stack of clauses gets used against you, the complaint goes to the same nameless operator that wrote it, because no independent referee exists at this licence tier.
The dice that never actually roll
Put dice in your name and logo, and you’re making a promise: tables, craps energy, live dealers, the green felt end of gambling. Wild Dice Casino makes that promise and then stocks almost none of it. The live and table selection is really thin, and what the casino actually is, behind the branding, is a slots warehouse: a couple of thousand games drawing on a mid-tier and better provider mix, Pragmatic Play and its live arm, Hacksaw Gaming, PG Soft, BGaming, Spinomenal, Spribe, Amusnet and a long tail of smaller studios, organised by provider and popularity, with demo play available and a tournaments section running alongside. The interface does the job without winning any design prizes.
It’s a perfectly serviceable slots catalogue, and that’s the fair thing to say about it. It’s also worth saying that game fairness at any casino is only as good as the auditing behind it, and an Anjouan licence held by an anonymous operator is not an auditing regime that gives those reel results independent backing.
My product summary in one line: a slots site wearing a table-game costume, run by a company that won’t wear a name badge at all.
Support and complaints
Support information is as thin as everything else this operator publishes about itself.
Live chat: advertised on site, with round-the-clock claims made in its marketing
Support email: support@wilddicecasino.com
Customer support phone: No customer support phone number
Escalation: none; no independent dispute body sits behind an Anjouan licence
An operator that won’t print its company name is unlikely to print a direct contact, and the practical consequence is that chat is the relationship. For anyone playing here despite the warnings I’ve given, the records that matter are the ones this casino’s terms make dangerous: screenshot your VIP tier and its cashback table before relying on either, keep deposit records since your deposits cap your allowable winnings, log in periodically so the dormancy clause never wakes, and withdraw at every £100 the moment the balance allows, because the monthly ceiling means big balances only shrink slowly.
Wild Dice Casino’s Reputation
Fairness requires a distinction: Wild Dice Casino doesn’t come with the documented mass non-payment record that condemns the worst operations in this market. Its one-business-day wire pledge is better than the bank-only five-day habit at the Mega Win end of its family, and the young 666 Gambit has even gathered a respectable early score from its first handful of reviewers. The trouble is everything the casino has chosen to write down. A 90x wagering requirement, a winnings cap tied to deposits even in bonus-free play, dormant-balance deductions, a £100 withdrawal floor, a hidden monthly ceiling and a VIP ladder with unpublished rules aren’t rumours or grudges; they’re the operator’s own published terms, and together they describe a casino designed so that money flows inward far more freely than it flows out.
Add the structural signals, the anonymous footer, the masked records, the addresses that keep changing, a sister site launched without any licence at all, and the picture is consistent: not a proven non-payer, but an operation that has reserved every contractual and practical advantage for itself, answerable to a regulator that doesn’t referee, where it answers to one at all. My take is simple: you don’t need a casino to have robbed anyone yet when its contract announces the terms on which it could.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- Wire withdrawals pledged within one business day, plus crypto payout routes, faster than most of its own family.
- A large slots catalogue with respectable providers and demo play.
- Daily cashback paid as a routine, with a guaranteed-prize weekly wheel.
- An Anjouan licence and displayed legal details, which beats the nothing its newest sister site runs on.
What I don’t
- 90x wagering that turns the £4,500 headline into farce, nearly double even its own family’s standard.
- Winnings capped by your deposit history and balances raided after dormancy, in black and white in the terms.
- An operator that hides its name, masks its records and keeps changing address.
- A £100 withdrawal floor and a low monthly ceiling squeezing players from both ends.
My Wild Dice Casino verdict: read the contract, not the banner
Every fact points the same direction once you arrange it. The banner offers £4,500; the wagering makes it close to unwinnable. The cashback pays daily; it pays best to whoever loses most. The VIP ladder glitters; its rules are secret. The withdrawals are quick; the floor, the ceiling and the deposit-linked winnings cap decide how much ever travels. And the company collecting the deposits won’t print its own name or stay at one address. International readers comparing the Interactive Pro N.V. casinos should know the comparison is cosmetic: Mega Win and i24Slots run the same machinery with smaller catalogues and slower bank-only payouts, while 666 Gambit trades its sister’s 90x for a friendlier 50x and quick payments, then undercuts itself by holding no licence whatsoever, so there’s no safer door into this particular house, just differently decorated ones. For readers in Britain, no judgement call is needed: a family with no UKGC authorisation, no GamStop participation and one member running with no licence at all is off limits, and this flagship’s contract gives even players in markets it can legally serve every reason to spend their money where the owner has a name.
Wild Dice Casino sister sites FAQ: your questions answered
Does Wild Dice Casino have sister sites?
Yes: Mega Win, i24Slots, 666 Gambit and Disco Win, all run by Interactive Pro N.V. of Curaçao. The operator hides its identity well enough that more brands could exist unconfirmed.
Who operates Wild Dice Casino?
Interactive Pro N.V., a Curaçao-registered company that doesn’t print its name on its own casino sites and masks its domain records. The casino launched in 2023.
Is Wild Dice Casino licensed?
It holds an Anjouan Gaming licence from the Comoros, a light-touch offshore permit with no independent dispute body behind it, and the family doesn’t even hold that line consistently, with sister site 666 Gambit running unlicensed.
Can UK players use Wild Dice Casino?
No. There’s no UKGC licence, no GamStop participation and no British protections anywhere in this family, so it’s off limits to players in Britain.
What is the Wild Dice Casino welcome bonus?
A 200% match worth up to £4,500 plus 100 free spins, all loaded onto the first deposit rather than spread across several. The package carries 90x wagering, which makes converting it into withdrawable cash close to impossible.
Is 90x wagering normal?
No. British casinos are legally capped at 10x, the offshore world mostly stops between 35x and 50x, and even Wild Dice Casino’s own sister 666 Gambit charges 50x. At 90x, a maxed £4,500 bonus would demand £405,000 of turnover before a withdrawal.
What is 666 Gambit?
The family’s devil-themed 2025 launch, advertising up to £3,000 and 100 free spins across two 300% deposit matches at 50x wagering, with one-business-day payment processing. It holds no gaming licence from any jurisdiction.
How does the Wild Dice Casino cashback work?
It’s paid daily based on the previous day’s deposits and losses, from £10 on a £100 to £199 deposit up to £500 on £5,000 or more at lower tiers, and £15 to £750 at higher ones, with maximum daily cashback rates rising from 25% to 100% across the seven VIP levels. How players climb those levels isn’t clear.
How do Wild Dice Casino withdrawals work?
By wire transfer, pledged within one business day, or to Bitcoin, Litecoin or Ethereum wallets. The minimum is a high £100, a low monthly ceiling applies, and the terms also cap winnings by your deposit total and deduct from accounts left dormant for six to twelve months.
Why does Wild Dice Casino keep changing its web address?
The brand has traded through several addresses in short order, including -play and -win variants of its name. Casinos rotate domains like that when blocks in regulated countries keep catching up with them, and it should be read as the warning it is.