Following FinTelegram’s opening of the Stardust Global CCS Ltd / STAKES.com compliance investigation, Cyprus service providers McMillan Woods Cyprus Ltd and Dimitris Dimitriou / Polycon Services Ltd have denied any operational or payment-processing role. FinTelegram has updated its report and continues to seek whistleblower evidence on the alleged payment rails.
FinTelegram has received a detailed whistleblower submission and Cyprus corporate filings concerning Stardust Global CCS Ltd, BRB24 TECH N.V., and alleged STAKES.com payment flows. We are now calling on insiders, payment professionals, service providers, and affected players to submit evidence.
FinTelegram’s Malina Casino review exposes a geo-domain payment-rail layer targeting EU players through jurisdiction-specific deposit routes. Austrian and Italian test flows revealed Revolut Open Banking, Perspecteev SAS, RAPID, Finmesh, Skrill, MiFinity, ChainValley-style fake-FIAT crypto conversion, Zentoria, and the newly surfaced mixfind.com payee. The evidence points to a classic offshore casino rail model: the casino brand stays in the front window, while rotating payment facilitators, payees, gateways and open-banking actors move the money underneath.
FinTelegram’s May 2026 review of Betify shows a materially reconfigured payment architecture compared with the August 2024 review. The visible corporate wrapper has changed from Altacore N.V. / Altaprime Limited to Fortuna Games N.V. / Deltaprime Limited, but the underlying risk pattern remains: EU players can apparently access and fund an offshore casino through layered payment rails.
FinTelegram’s latest Revolut Rail Atlas review of 1Go Casino shows how a player-facing offshore casino cashier can route deposits through a multi-layered payment stack before reaching a regulated open-banking interface. In the tested Revolut flow, the user journey moved from 1Go Casino through BillBlend, SegoPay, Tryzto, InstantBankPayment, Yapily Connect UAB, and finally oba.revolut.com, where the user was asked to authorise Yapily Connect UAB.
FinTelegram’s review of GoldenBet shows a diversified payment architecture around the Santeda Group: card deposits evidenced through Payabl, wallet deposits showing Santeda International Limited as beneficiary via MiFinity, and an Open Banking rail through Bilderlings → Yapily Connect → Revolut’s Open Banking API. This is no longer a single-PSP complaint story. It is a Rail Atlas case study in how offshore casino operators maintain EU-facing payment continuity
A German player’s GDPR request has exposed a critical compliance issue: the Cyprus-regulated EMI Payabl processed multiple credit card deposits to Santeda International Limited, the payment agent behind offshore casino GoldenBet, which operates without an EU license. Despite being alerted to the illegality and the player’s gambling addiction, Payabl refused refunds,
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 fresh cashier review of the SpinFin offshore casino (accessed via SpinFin5.com) shows a familiar pattern: “FIAT” deposit labels that actually route players into fiat-to-crypto purchases and onward transfers to operator wallets. Screenshots confirm multiple on-ramping layers — including **DAXCHAIN OÜ using Tink, Chain Valley Sp. z o.o. issuing “exchange orders” behind Skrill/Neteller/Rapid, and Bitcan sp. z o.o. converting deposits into USDC while the UI still reads like a bank payment flow.
The Canadian MSB CenturaPay (Canamoney Exchange Ltd) has been slapped with a Red Risk Signal on RatEx42. Investigations reveal its pivotal role as a high-risk payment agent, facilitating illegal offshore gambling deposits by piggybacking on the infrastructure of established processors like MiFinity. As regulators tighten the noose, the "Canadian Bridge" is beginning to buckle.
The Dutch regulator Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) has imposed a €4,228,000 administrative fine on Starscream Limited for offering illegal online gambling to Dutch players via RantCasino, AllstarzCasino, and SugarCasino. The KSA explicitly frames enforcement as a “third-party” problem too—working with payment service providers, banks, hosting, and big tech—because unlicensed casinos don’t scale without rails.
The Dutch gambling regulator Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) has imposed a €4,228,000 administrative fine on Starscream Limited for offering illegal online gambling to Dutch players via Rantcasino, AllstarzCasino, and SugarCasino. The case underlines what FinTelegram has been documenting for months: these are not “minor violations,” but systematic breaches—and the payment stack enabling them is part of the risk surface.