Oro.gg, operated by Belize-registered Tusitier Ltd, illegally targets European and British players without valid regulatory licensing. The casino facilitates unauthorized gambling through heavily disguised fiat-to-crypto payment rails. Our analysis reveals that Polish VASP ChainValley—acting as the successor to suspended Lithuanian utPay—systematically circumvents banking blocks, masking casino deposits via mainstream e-wallets like Skrill, Neteller, and Revolut.
Despite aggressive expansion into strictly regulated European and UK markets, LuckyWins operates entirely without legal authorization, hiding behind a Costa Rican shell. Our latest deposit tests reveal a highly sophisticated payment architecture where Tier-1 European financial institutions—including PPRO, Yapily, and MiFinity—are being weaponized to process illegal gambling funds via open banking exploits and "fake FIAT" crypto on-ramps.
A German offshore-casino player has provided FinTelegram with a detailed account that directly supports our working hypothesis: ChainValley is replacing Lithuania’s suspended utPay/UTRG stack inside casino cashier flows—especially where deposits are branded as Skrill. The player describes a “Skrill payment” that is actually a crypto purchase + wallet transfer, and a refund/KYC workflow where ChainValley support allegedly sent the verification link—suggesting operational continuity behind the scenes.
BetAlice appears to be operating without visible operator disclosure while remaining accessible across multiple domains despite Italian blackouts on some URLs. Our payment-rail review found a familiar offshore-casino stack: ChainValley behind cashier-branded methods (including Skrill/NETELLER labels), and an multiy-layered open-banking route with Paradis Tech Ltd shown as payee and Yapily/Wise Open Banking references in the flow.
As European regulators tighten the noose on Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) ahead of MiCA implementation, the UTORG Group—a key payment facilitator for offshore casinos via SoftSwiss—has executed a strategic jurisdictional shift. Following the suspension of its Lithuanian operations, evidence points to a migration toward Poland via Chain Valley Sp. z o.o., signaling a "whack-a-mole" approach to maintaining high-risk payment rails.
FinTelegram’s Rail Atlas reviews of Stellar-linked offshore casinos show a repeatable payments pattern: players are routed through “open banking” and wallet rails that do not pay the casino directly, but instead pay VASP-registered intermediaries—notably DAXCHAIN (Estonia) and ChainValley (Poland)—that appear to function as fiat collection points. This is not an edge case. It looks like a scalable operating model designed to keep the casino out of the payment line-of-fire.
Recent whistleblower reports and online investigative publications in January 2026 allege that SoftSwiss, through its Malta-licensed entity Stable Aggregator Limited (MGA/B2B/942/2022), operates as an unlicensed payment hub and money laundering facilitator for affiliated casino operators targeting prohibited jurisdictions. The allegations assert that SoftSwiss processes payments from unlicensed merchants.
Our review of offshore casino Legiano (legiano.com) shows a recurring “fake-fiat” deposit pattern: what is presented as a normal fiat top-up is, in reality, an embedded crypto purchase (USDC) that is automatically routed to the casino’s wallets via app.chainvalley.pro—with only minimal, pre-ticked disclosure.