Wino Casino sister sites in a nutshell
Wino Casino has a sister sites family. It’s one of eight brands run by Softon Ltd, a young Cyprus-registered operator, sitting alongside Kingdom Casino, Mad Casino, TenoBet, Dracula Casino, Tucan Casino, Aphrodite Casino and Betzter, with a related-ownership line back to Seven Casino, the project this team built first. The whole group trades internationally on an Anjouan Gaming licence, sells itself on five-figure welcome packages, and operates entirely outside British regulation, which means none of it is available, or advisable, for UK players.

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The UK position: Wino Casino holds an Internet Gaming Licence from Anjouan Gaming, an offshore regulator in the Comoros, and no licence from the UK Gambling Commission. It isn’t part of GamStop; no UK consumer protections or dispute schemes apply, and it is off-limits to players in Great Britain. Nothing in this guide is a route around self-exclusion, and anyone registered with GamStop should not be looking for one.
At a glance
Brand reviewed
Wino Casino
Operator
Softon Ltd, Cyprus
Licence
Anjouan Gaming, acquired after launch
UK status
No UKGC licence, not on GamStop, off-limits to UK players
Sister sites
Kingdom Casino, Mad Casino, TenoBet, Dracula Casino, Tucan Casino, Aphrodite Casino, Betzter
Welcome bonus
600% advertised, up to £10,000 at 25x
Launched
2025
Last checked
11 June 2026
The Softon Ltd family mapped out
Softon Ltd was incorporated in Cyprus in August 2024 and built its casino stable at speed: eight themed casinos inside roughly a year, sharing one licence, one platform approach and one bonus philosophy. A caution before the profiles: offshore corporate records are nowhere near as clean as a UKGC register, so while these brands are consistently credited to the same operator and present the same way, the group should be read as a trading family rather than a documented corporate tree. The five Wino sister sites below are the most established faces, described for the international audience they’re aimed at.


Mad Casino
- Relationship: The brand most consistently treated as the Softon Ltd flagship, sharing the group’s licence and platform.
- Identity: The fullest product in the family, running the complete casino and sportsbook lineup the smaller siblings sample from.
- Compared with Wino Casino: Substantially the same operation with a louder name and the widest catalogue, where Wino Casino trims toward its slots-and-sport core.
- Worth noting: Flagship status in an offshore group describes size, not oversight; the regulatory framework is identical across all eight brands.
- The practical read: Whatever conduct Wino Casino shows on withdrawals and terms, expect the same here, because the back office is shared.

Kingdom Casino
- Relationship: A Softon Ltd stablemate trading on the same Anjouan licence framework.
- Identity: The royal-themed member, and the family’s loudest bonus advertiser, with welcome packages pitched into five figures.
- Compared with Wino Casino: The two compete on headline size, and both attach the group’s standard heavy playthrough to those headlines.
- Worth noting: The bigger the advertised percentage, the more the wagering maths matters; a crown on the logo doesn’t soften 25x wagering.
- The practical read: A useful case study in how this group markets: maximum number on the banner, full conditions in the small print.

TenoBet
- Relationship: The group’s 2025 addition, launched into the same licence and platform setup as its sister sites.
- Identity: The most betting-forward name in the stable, leading with sport where most of the family leads with reels.
- Compared with Wino Casino: Wino Casino carries a surprisingly broad sportsbook of its own, so TenoBet is less an upgrade than the same product with the menu reordered.
- Worth noting: Sports bonuses across this group carry wagering in the teens, which is far beyond what serious sportsbook markets consider normal.
- The practical read: Judge it on its sports bonus terms, because that’s where this family’s value claims are weakest.

Dracula Casino
- Relationship: Another costume on the same Softon Ltd network, sharing the group’s licence position.
- Identity: The horror-themed wing, all vampire styling over the family’s standard slots, live games and betting markets.
- Compared with Wino Casino: The clearest demonstration that this group’s brands differ by paint job: swap the gothic skin for Wino Casino’s and the product underneath barely moves.
- Worth noting: Themed branding tends to spawn the most clone and mirror domains, so the real address matters more here than anywhere.
- The practical read: Atmosphere is the offer; the terms, cashier and protections are the family’s, unchanged.

Tucan Casino
- Relationship: The tropical member of the Wino Casino sister sites stable, on the same licence footing as the rest.
- Identity: A toucan-fronted, beach-bright wrapper, the family’s most committed piece of theming, eccentric spelling included.
- Compared with Wino Casino: The opposite branding instinct: Tucan Casino leans hard into its mascot while Wino Casino’s name is a pun the site never really develops.
- Worth noting: Cheerful presentation has no bearing on dispute handling, which across this group ends with the operator itself.
- The practical read: A reminder that in this family, choosing a casino is choosing a mood, not a different set of protections.
How the network divides up
Mad Casino carries the fullest catalogue and functions as the shop window; Kingdom Casino pushes the biggest advertised numbers, TenoBet reorders the same product around its sportsbook, Dracula Casino and Tucan Casino sell atmosphere at opposite ends of the mood spectrum, Aphrodite Casino dresses the platform in Greek mythology, and Betzter plays it straightest of all. Eight names, one operator, one licence, one set of terms and philosophy, and for anyone in Britain, all eight sit on the same wrong side of the regulatory line.

Ownership, licensing and what Anjouan actually covers
Softon Ltd is a Cyprus-registered company, incorporated in August 2024 and based in Nicosia, and Wino Casino is its wine-pun-named 2025 launch. The people behind the group previously built Seven Casino, a connection best described as related ownership and shared pedigree rather than a documented sister site relationship, since Seven Casino sits outside the Softon Ltd stable. The official home is wino.casino, with wino8.casino operating as an official mirror; treat any other lookalike domain with suspicion, because the brand has attracted a swarm of unofficial clones.
The licence deserves unvarnished description. Wino Casino launched without one and ran unlicensed through its early period, picking up its Anjouan Gaming Internet Gaming Licence afterwards. Anjouan, part of the Comoros, runs one of the cheapest and fastest offshore regimes in the industry: one permit covers casino and sportsbook, there’s no tax on gambling revenue, and supervision is light by design. It’s a legal foundation, and a meaningful step up from nothing, but it isn’t consumer protection in any sense a British player would recognise. There’s no independent dispute body behind it, no funds-protection regime to cite, and no compensation route if things go wrong. The licence tells you the operator filled in the right forms; it doesn’t referee the match.
The 600% welcome package, audited
The homepage banner promises a 600% welcome package with 20% cashback. The casino half checks out arithmetically: five matched deposits running 200% up to £500, then 100% up to £1,500, 100% up to £3,000, 50% up to £2,000 and 150% up to £3,000, a theoretical £10,000 in bonus funds, every pound of it wagered at 25x before withdrawal. The cashback half doesn’t check out at all: nothing in the published promotions delivers the advertised 20%, and a headline benefit that can’t be located in the terms is exactly the kind of gap that decides whether you trust an operator.
The sportsbook welcome runs 100% up to £500, £1,000 and £1,500 across three deposits, wagered at 15x, a number that would be unremarkable on slots and is enormous for sports, where margins are thinner, and turnover requirements bite far harder. The weekly calendar repeats the pattern: slots reloads of 150% up to £1,500, 100% up to £1,000 and 200% up to £1,000 across Monday, Wednesday and Friday at the same 25x, and sports reloads of 100% up to £1,000 on the same three days at the same 15x. Generosity on the banner, gravity in the terms.
Here’s the regulatory context that makes sense of these numbers. British casinos have been legally capped at 10x wagering since January 2026, which is why no UK-licensed brand can advertise anything resembling this. Offshore licences impose no such ceiling, so the trade on display is the offshore trade in its purest form: percentages a regulated market would never permit, attached to playthrough a regulated market would never permit either. Anyone tempted by the £10,000 figure should do the multiplication first, because clearing 25x on a maxed package means turning over a quarter of a million pounds.
Payments, withdrawals and KYC
The deposit side is conventional and wide: all major debit cards, the e-wallets Skrill, Neteller and AstroPay, and the full spread of mainstream cryptocurrencies, which is where a casino like this expects much of its traffic. Getting money in will not be the problem.
Getting it out is where the documentation collapses. The FAQ’s entire guidance on withdrawal timing is that it varies by method and that e-wallets move faster than bank transfers, which is the payments equivalent of a weather forecast. No processing windows, no minimums, no maximum withdrawal limits, no fee schedule: for an operator advertising five-figure bonuses, publishing nothing about how winnings leave the building is the single most telling omission on the site.
The terms reserve the right to verify identity and age before deposits or withdrawals, so expect documents to be demanded, most likely at the moment you first try to cash out. The crucial difference from a regulated casino is what happens if that process stalls: there’s no adjudicator to appeal to, so a KYC dispute here is a negotiation with the only party that also controls your balance. Cashier verdict: easy entry, undocumented exit, and the absence of published withdrawal rules should be treated as information in itself.
A pun for a name and a crowd-pleaser for a lobby
The name reads as a riff on “win”, though the unfortunate second meaning hangs over it, and the site never develops either idea into an actual theme: no vineyard styling, no celebration motif, just a bold, generic modern lobby.
The games themselves are a study in giving the market what it asks for. The slots wall is dominated by Pragmatic Play’s biggest hitters, Big Bass Bonanza, Sweet Bonanza, Gates of Olympus and The Dog House Megaways, with Hacksaw’s Wanted Dead or a Wild and Wazdan’s Hot 777 adding edge, all curated into themed Collections like Crash Games and Ancient Egypt. The live casino is the giveaway tier-marker: roulette, blackjack, baccarat and Dragon Tiger from 7Mojos, Vivo and XPG, competent studios all, but the absence of the premium live names tells you which shelf this operation shops from. The sportsbook is actually broader than it needs to be, running from football and basketball through esports, cricket and table tennis, and it’s clearly meant as a proper second pillar rather than an afterthought.
Support and complaints
Contact channels are the standard pair, and availability is one thing the brand does commit to in writing.
Live chat: 24/7 on site
Support email: support@winocasino.com
Customer support phone: No customer support phone number
Escalation: no ADR body, no independent adjudicator; complaints begin and end with the operator
That last line is the one to absorb. At a regulated casino, a deadlocked complaint goes to a free external referee; here, the referee is the other team. For anyone playing despite that, the defensive habits are non-negotiable: screenshot every bonus banner and its terms on the day of claiming, record deposit confirmations and wagering progress, photograph the cashback promise if you intend to chase it, and keep withdrawal request timestamps. Evidence won’t summon an adjudicator, but it’s the only leverage that exists in a system without one.
Wino Casino’s reputation
Wino Casino is too young for a deep complaints archive, so the fairest reputational reading comes from its own observable behaviour, and that behaviour cuts both ways. On the credit side: the operator pedigree includes Seven Casino, a respected name in the international space, the support channels run around the clock, and the group moved from unlicensed to licensed rather than staying in the dark, which is the right direction of travel. On the debit side: a homepage advertising 20% cashback that the promotions don’t deliver, withdrawal rules that exist nowhere in public, a launch period spent without any licence at all, and an ecosystem of clone domains around the brand that makes even finding the real site a small test of vigilance.
The withdrawal pattern to watch for at any casino of this profile is the standard offshore one: small cashouts move smoothly, larger ones meet sudden verification demands, and bonus-funded wins get audited against terms with great enthusiasm. None of that is documented against Wino Casino specifically yet; all of it is what the missing paperwork leaves room for. A brand earns trust by writing its rules down where players can hold it to them, and this one hasn’t.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- An eight-brand operator family with a credible pedigree behind it.
- A mainstream, well-stocked product: headline slots, a serious sportsbook, live tables and crypto-inclusive banking.
- 24/7 live chat with a verified email address.
- Licensing moved in the right direction, from nothing to Anjouan.
What I don’t
- An advertised 20% cashback that the promotions never deliver.
- 25x casino and 15x sports wagering that hollow out the giant headline percentages.
- No published withdrawal times, limits or fees anywhere on the site.
- An Anjouan licence with no independent complaints route, and no UK authorisation at all.
My Wino Casino verdict: a competent product on an honour system
Strip the analysis to one sentence, and it’s this: Wino Casino asks to be trusted on exactly the points where it declines to commit itself in writing. The games are well-chosen, the sportsbook has genuine breadth, the support desk answers at 3am, and the family behind it is a known operator group with a traceable history. But the cashback on the front door isn’t in the contract, the withdrawal rules aren’t published at all, and the licence, while better than the nothing it started with, appoints no referee a player can turn to. International readers weighing it against its own sister sites should weigh Softon Ltd once, because all eight brands are the same promise in different paint, and the promise is only as good as an operator that’s still building its track record. For readers in Britain, the weighing exercise doesn’t arise: Wino Casino holds no UK licence, sits outside GamStop and every British protection, and is off-limits, full stop.
Wino Casino sister sites FAQ: your questions answered
Does Wino Casino have sister sites?
Yes, seven of them: Kingdom Casino, Mad Casino, TenoBet, Dracula Casino, Tucan Casino, Aphrodite Casino and Betzter, all run by Softon Ltd under the same arrangements.
Who operates Wino Casino?
Softon Ltd, a Cyprus-registered company incorporated in August 2024 and based in Nicosia, built by the team previously behind Seven Casino. Wino Casino launched in 2025.
Is Wino Casino licensed?
It now holds an Internet Gaming Licence from Anjouan Gaming in the Comoros, having spent its early period unlicensed. Anjouan is a light-touch offshore permit with no independent dispute body behind it.
Can UK players use Wino Casino?
No. It has no UK Gambling Commission licence, isn’t part of GamStop, and carries none of the protections that British law requires, so it’s off-limits to players in Britain.
What is the Wino Casino welcome bonus?
A five-deposit casino package worth up to £10,000 in matched funds at 25x wagering, and a three-deposit sports package worth up to £3,000 at 15x. The 20% cashback advertised on the homepage doesn’t appear in the published promotions.
Why are Wino Casino’s bonuses so much bigger than UK casino offers?
Because no cap applies offshore. UK casinos have been limited to 10x wagering since January 2026, while Anjouan-licensed sites can attach 25x to packages of any size, which is how the headlines grow and the real value shrinks.
How fast are Wino Casino withdrawals?
Unknown, and that’s the only answer I can give you: the site publishes no processing times, limits or fees, saying only that e-wallets are quicker than bank transfers. Cards, Skrill, Neteller, AstroPay and major cryptocurrencies are supported.
How do I contact Wino Casino support?
Live chat runs 24/7 on the site, with email at support@winocasino.com as backup. There’s no customer support phone number, and no independent body to escalate to beyond the operator.
Is wino8.casino legitimate?
It’s an official mirror of wino.casino, which is the canonical address. The brand has attracted many unofficial clone domains beyond that pair, so anything else carrying the name should be treated with caution.
Is Wino Casino connected to Seven Casino?
By people rather than paperwork: the same team built both, but Seven Casino isn’t part of the Softon Ltd stable, so it’s related ownership heritage rather than a sister site.