After FinTelegram’s reporting on Zentoria, Spinsopotamia and the NALMI casino-domain environment, the Spinsopotamia.com front appears to have moved from a 403-access-denied posture to a GoDaddy parking page. The change does not prove causation, but it raises fresh questions for PSPs, acquirers and regulators about merchant monitoring, descriptors and replacement domains.
FinTelegram explains the Zentoria / Spinsopotamia / NALMI case in plain English: how an EU-facing payment and website anchor may sit inside a much wider offshore casino-domain infrastructure. The technical evidence does not prove common ownership, but it challenges the idea that Spinsopotamia is merely an isolated standalone casino site.
A growing body of indicators suggests that a cluster of outwardly separate online casino brands may be linked, directly or indirectly, to Zentoria Limited and a shared backend payments architecture. FinTelegram reviewed operator attributions, Irish licensing records, repeated payee clues, and live payment flows across multiple brands. The result is not yet a final legal attribution of the full network, but the hypothesis of a Zentoria-linked casino cluster has become increasingly plausible.
Following our Feb 19, 2026 compliance report on Zentoria Limited and the NovaForge casino network (Robycasino/Spinsy), a whistleblower has provided email documentation indicating that the card billing descriptor “Spinsopotamia.com” is connected to xpate (xpate.com) — a payment services / e-money firm that states it is authorised by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) as an Electronic Money Institution (EMI).
FinTelegram reveals that Irish-registered Zentoria Limited is operating as a shadow payment processor for another NovaForge brand, Robycasino. Disguising transactions under the billing descriptor "Spinsopotamia.com Dublin," Zentoria is quietly facilitating offshore gambling while holding an official Irish Remote Bookmaker's Licence.