
If you’re someone who’s in his 40s – may be 10 years younger could work too – and are an avid slots player; also live in America; then there’s a slight above-average chance that you’d heard of Slotland.eu. Perhaps even played there.
You visit this site, and will probably find it “not very appealing,” as far as its oldie design goes. It looks quite basic; as if the time has stopped for them. Really, I mean it’s not that they can’t afford a revamp. Just do it already. Even the Gen-Zs are starting their families now; yet Slotland.eu’s website looks as if it’s some 17th century Amish town.
Their licensing status is basically a joke; but then again it’s better than nothing
I tried to search its origins; like who the people are behind the scenes; I couldn’t find any data. But, then it’s an offshore betting site. I don’t think we’d ever find out who really owns this joint. However, as far as the company goes, it operates under Slotland Entertainment S.A.; that has its business registration – and perhaps real offices too – in two countries; Panama (license is suspended) and Cyprus – this is where they seem to be operational since 2017.
SLOTLAND ENTERTAINMENT LIMITED is registered in Cyprus at 04/09/17 as a(n) Limited Company. The Registration Number for this Cyprus Limited Company as held by the Official Government of the Cyprus Registrar Of Companies is HE373364. The Organisation Status is Active. There are 2 Officials currently on file. The address of the company is Αρχ. Μακαρίου ΙΙΙ, 75, 1070, Λευκωσία, Κύπρος. As for the officials as seen at the Official Cyprus Registrar at the point in time when the data were collected SLOTLAND ENTERTAINMENT S.A. holds the position of Director, CIPIEM COMPANY SERVICES LIMITED holds the position of Secretary. There are might be more directors and secretaries that are not currently listed in this description as the information represent a point in time in the past.
And their parent company has been on the scene since 1998.
Every brand at Slotland Entertainment S.A. is fully licensed and registered by the Government of the Island of Mwali (Mohéli).
For some weird reason they also brag about being members of an entity called the Interactive Gaming Council (IGC). Personally, I couldn’t find much about these people, other than it promotes fair gaming (don’t all casinos do that?); and that it’s not relevant in today’s world; especially when compared to other similar setups like eCOGRA; and government-backed regulators like the UKGC, MGA and even offshore sites’ favorite Curacao eGaming.
In fact IGC’s official website is also defunct and redirects to some gambling affiliate website targeting Canadians.
Slotland, if you’re reading this. Please remove this reference from your sites. It doesn’t reflect well on you. Makes you look complacent; or just plain lazy.
As for the license from the Union of Comoros compared to say, the standard Curacao; well, I don’t understand the logic for this jurisdiction. Well, I can, because I think I know why. First, the cost; Curacao license can cost up to EUR 49,000 a year while Mwali license is EUR 20K. Then there are the KYC and anti-money laundering rules; which Curacao has improved on (is more stringent now) making it in line with the EU’s. And lastly, I believe is the approval process, which can take months (especially since 2023’s policy changes) for Curacao.
It has three other casinos
Apart from Slotland, it also runs three other sites; namely Winaday Casino; CryptoSlots; CryptoWins. There’s literally no difference among them, perhaps other than the fact that the last two are cryptocurrency-focused. Duh!
May be it’s for the affiliates. Like they can have more brands to promote, get links to, create reviews for. Sometimes it’s for SEO reasons too. But, this is not 2009. Having multiple domains doing the same thing ain’t going to score top positions on Google. I think this search engine (despite being terrible nowadays, thanks to those AIOs) is smarter than this.
And besides, even Slotland, being the flagship brand hardly gets any traffic from Google. Last time I checked (17th March 2025); Similarweb shows only like 71K monthly visits; which is frankly quite low for an online casino this ancient.

But, in case you’d want an alternative, why not test out Slots.lv, which is owned by Bovada. Mind you, Slots.lv’s reviews aren’t good. In fact, quite bad.
They don’t use third-party iGaming providers; make their own slot titles; which sort of gives them an aura of exclusivity
I’m not even sure if it’s that cool of a deal.
But for regular gamblers who’re sick of playing the same titles from the same set of “standard run-of-the-mill” iGaming providers, this place does lay down something unique on the table. However, I’m not positive this is their KSP. May be it is. I’m not sure.
I mean, I would get bored playing the same slot machine dozens of times. At least with other casinos, I’d have a choice of 70+ or so companies with thousands of titles; with dozens of new entrants coming in every other day. For me at least, that would be hot.
So I’m not sure why people would stick around Slotland, after having played a select number of titles. Their video poker games are also in-house; so one can’t even trust their RNG fully. I mean there isn’t any way to prove they aren’t rigged. This, plus the fact that the majority would lose their money too; even if they weren’t tampered with. So boredom + deposit loss. LOL. How’s that attractive?
Also one would have imagined they would at least come up with an app of some sort. It’s browser-based, so where is the uniqueness. But, hmm, this is just my opinion. I know tons feel comfy with just login-and-play browser-based casinos.
So, I dropped like $100 for you guys to check them out.
First, I played and lost $10 or so each on their sort-of popular titles, namely: Blazing Wilds, which is 15-payline, has stacked symbols, wilds; Coin Rush; this one is 20 paylines, has double wilds, Leprechaun Luck; it has 30 paylines, part of their progressive line up. Then there’s Wild Alaska (with expanding wilds) and Super Sevens (has 19 paylines); both push free bonus plays.
One thing I noticed is that all these titles aren’t totally novel, like they advertise. I mean Blazing Wilds looks like a rip-off of Dragon’s Fire Megaways by Red Tiger Gaming; Coin Rush, a copy of Gold Rush by Pragmatic Play; Leprechaun Luck, very similar to Rainbow Riches by Barcrest, with the progressive theme; Wild Alaska, with the storyline and game design of Arctic Magic by Microgaming; and Super Sevens, seems to have been inspired by Hotline 2 by NetEnt.
You see every game on their roster is basically a “creative copy” of popular titles by major gaming providers. They tend to modify the screen graphics of these games just enough, as to not get copyright infringement notices from the mainstream companies.
I mean, this is just what I’ve found out, doing my own research. Feel free to disagree, or prove me wrong (through evidence of course).
It’s not all corny though. For example, at least their progressives are slightly better in terms of mechanics. Unlike other casino sites, at Slotland, these work under what’s called the “networked progressive jackpot,” so it can be won multiple times over and over again, rather that just once.
The prize pool is spread over many slot titles, which means you can win big, provided you’re lucky on any qualifying game, even with a bare-minimum bet size. This way, jackpots can be won “more regularly” compared to the standard system of one-game, one-jackpot, adopted by its peers. Also these slots reset after the prize money hits six-figures.
Mega Win, Treasure Box, Jacks or Better Video Poker, and Leprechaun Luck <– (this one is so like Playtech’s title), are few I found to be interesting if you want to try your luck on progressives.
The “idea” of such progressives sure comes from names like Mega Moolah, 777 Deluxe and A Night with Cleo type games, already fairly common on most betting platforms.
Slotland does pay out, but you have to make sure that you don’t hesitate when it comes providing your personal details
If you don’t want that, they also tend to recommend (themselves) their sister site, CryptoSlots – for obvious reasons. But, as long as you’re using the Slotland platform, depositing through cards or normal fiat methods, they will require you to submit the scans of your personal ID and utility bill etc., – the day-to-day verification stuff.
I never got to that point to be honest, since I lost my entire deposit after like an hour or so. LOL. Yea, nature does you dirty like that.
Also make sure that you go through their playthrough requirement, which can be in the higher range (starting from 25X all the way to 100X).
You can use the standard fiat-based methods, or simply use crypto, which is the norm nowadays. They support all major types, like Bitcoin, Ethereum, Monero, Tether, USD Coin, Binance Coin, but some reason recommend Litecoin. May be it’s because of the low processing cost associated with it. Funny they’re breaking bank already (I mean must be), but still worry about few cents here and there.
Minimum deposit is $25, with a max of $50,000 per transaction. So, one can deposit as much as one likes, just in the chunks of max $50K each. The processing is instant for crypto, might take a while for cards, wires and checks.
Don’t take on their bonuses unless you’re willing to do the work, or take the risks
Free money ain’t really free. Their wagering requirements are hard to beat. For example, even the simplest of bonuses, has a 25X rollover attached to it. So, for your $100 deposit, you’ll have to play $2500 worth of spins.
And, these people do offer no deposit bonuses too. Personally, I hate these things. I mean these deals only attract freebies or degenerates, whose job is to keep switching IPs through VPNs, create new emails, sign up repeatedly under different aliases, only get their $40’s worth of buzz.
Plus, if you get caught having multiple accounts, you get banned. Like this would stop them.
Anyways, I did a bit of digging and found the following NDB promos for you. There may be many more. They keep dropping new ones like every other week.
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- $68 No Deposit Bonus: This one doles out $68 in bonus cash upon registration. Code is FREE68SLOT.
- $43 No Deposit Bonus: New players get $43 in bonus funds. All you got to do is to register. Use the code TFB43. Comes with a 30X wagering requirement hit, with a max payout of $100
- $40 No Deposit Bonus: You can get a $40 free chip upon signing up. Just use WELCOME40 during registration.
- $34 No Deposit Bonus: This one gives out $34 in bonus cash. Redeem it by using code FREE34CSLD during account setup.
- $25 No Deposit Bonus: Get $25 free chip through code FREE25WLCM upon registration. But you got to do 25x wagering and the maximum cashout is $100.
Remember that Slotland restricts max payouts to a hundred dollars on no deposit bonus promotions. In layman’s terms, it just means that you shouldn’t expect to get paid a progressive jackpot. You would be hard-pressed withdrawing your $100, if you ever do win that much to begin with.
Now here comes the weird part. Slotland imposes extra sanctions on a few countries. Places like Argentina, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Brazil, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Russia, South Africa, Tanzania, and the UK have a “100X” wagering requirement.
I wanted to find out why though. But, couldn’t get any satisfactory answer. At best, it’s related to bonus exploitation, regulatory hurdles, anti-money laundering measures, professional gamblers wrecking their profit margins, or a high charge back risk from these countries.
Whatever it is, or a combination of. 100X is crazy.
I guess the only “silver lining” here is that slots contribute 100% to the wagering prerequisites. So, that’s good.
I never got to test out their support, but it looks pretty standard, nothing special
They do prefer email. You can shoot one at support@slotland.eu to gauge the time it takes them to get back to you. But, I would imagine a few hours to a day. So, nothing out of the blue there.
There’s also live chat. I was thinking of posting my transcript here, but there’s nothing in it that would help you out. I mean it’s just the very basic questions like “Do you accept cards,” or how much fee do you charge for crypto deposit,” (which is free by the way), stuff like that. The staff is courteous, but this is normal, and you would expect professionalism from any company. I mean talking to the support guy of your electric company would yield ditto behavior.
The dirt on them on sites like Trustpilot and Reddit is limited
There aren’t many reviews of them on Trustpilot (55 total, as of 17th March 2025). Rating is quite high, like 4.1 out of 5.0.
I know the sample is small. Plus, I also tend to ignore all the 4-star ones, because chances of them being fake (incentivized feedback) are abnormally high for majority of the betting companies. I mean fakeness is all around on social media. You don’t expect, gambling brands, for all, to lag behind. In fact, you’d expect them to go nuclear.
So, I “deliberately” chose the 1-star one, from a gentleman, who’s played there for years, is a VIP, and now genuinely feels that their games are smartly scamming him out of his money. He doesn’t provide proof of it. Frankly, there isn’t any way he can, since the backend access lies with Slotland. The company can simply deny and deflect, pasting common, “Oh we don’t do that. That’s against out ethics and we have been in business for 20 years, blah blah,” responses – noise like that.
Thing is it’s hard to prove deceit even for companies that are regulated in the mainland US. He could write the exact same review for FanDuel and DraftKings, and nothing would happen. These two companies – by the way – got terrible ratings on Trustpilot too, but let’s not go there. This is about Slotland. Here have read:
Let me just start off by saying that I am a VIP member and a long time user on this casino. I used to love playing there and I still love all the games.
But recently in the past 6 to 8 months they have gone downhill. I have noticed that the games have cheated in the way that they are supposed to pay out. It skips lines and does not pay out when it’s supposed to. Keep in mind I have been playing there for years and I know how their games and their software runs the games.
Unfortunately I must write a bad review because I feel that they are cheating and they are not what they used to be. Like I said unfortunately I must write a bad review I hate to do it but they have cheated me so bad and they are poorly running their software.
Good luck fellow casino luvrs
It’s not that Slotland people ignored him. They did reply back too:
We really appreciate your feedback, CW, while we’re eternaly grateful to have you as part of VIP community for so long.
Though let’s start our reply by pointing to a key fact that over the past several months we didn’t touch a thing on the way our games behave, spin or distribute wins. Further, this option can be completely ruled out by a simple fact: once a game has been released, it comes out with a particular RTP (or return to player) ‘locked in’, and and there is no way to adjust this on the fly to suddenly change the outcome of the game for all or a particular player.
Yes, both good and bad luck streaks can occur, and depending on the volatility of a particular game can appear as ‘neverending’, but what you described rather points me to a potential issue with getting a smooth gameplay. Have you perhaps switched devices, kept playing with a less standard browser or have any other reason to believe the gameplay could have been affected?
CL, we’re eager to dig deeper and find what’s causing this issue in your case, so feel free to contact Slotland support asking for Jack, ideally providing more details. Not only I’ll be happy to throw in a comp as of the inconvenience, but I’ll do my best to investigate and hopefully also mitigate this issue.
Let’s close out by saying that we’re always striving to create the best experience while playing at Slotland, and we can’t wait to surprise you with more exciting games and promos coming in the future!
You see..! I told you.
These replies all start with a condescending, or patronizing undertone.
“We are so thankful, that you have been a wonderful member of our team.” Or, “We have no control over the RNG or RTP” and best yet “We do hope you keep playing with us for a long time to come.”
Get outta here.
LOL. Perhaps I got a bit carried away there. But, you get the point.
Thing is there is no way for us – as frontend players – to really find out what’s going on in the backend.
The only way we can catch them in the action – provided it’s regulated and legal – is when we’re denied out winnings. We can then submit our complaints to the gaming control board, which then pushes these betting companies to “quickly” accept their fault, do the right thing, and settle.
Slotland on the other hand, isn’t even legal in the US, or any other country for that matter. There isn’t any oversight. They make their own rules for RTP, RNG; code their own games. We just have to believe their word for it.
I mean really?
Ah, well, to each his own. After all signing up on offshore betting sites is a personal choice. The repercussions that come entangled to it have to be accepted as is.
As far as Reddit goes, I think their reputation is on the higher side. I don’t know if the r/gambling subreddit is sponsored by them. I think it is, because it’s listed as a recommended betting site, if you look on the right-side column, along with the usual suspects Bovada, BetOnline and Stake.
Now, I’m not even confident the Gambling subreddit is neutral. The outgoing links have affiliate tracking codes in them, so whoever is running that community is earning top dollar. I don’t even know if Reddit’s management knows about it. May be the top mods are all in on it, sharing the loot and all.
Anyways, I couldn’t find many threads on Slotland. I don’t if the negative ones were removed (can the mods even do that) or they aren’t that popular to begin with; just old and dying.
The closest thread I could find was one guy, asking if it was a legit site and that if he would get paid. He got something like $100K in winnings playing the table games (lucky SOB), but was quite nervous. Here’s what he said:
I deposited $200 to try it out (with their 300% bonus). Hit a 500x $50 PlinkoBlitz bet, and ended up getting up to $29K with some Bacarat and BJ. One BTC Withdrawal is pending, and I sent the verification documents and confirmed they received them today. I triple checked the fine print of the promo, and there is no cashout maximum. I have completed the play through requirements 10x over. They didn’t let you “unlock” live casino until the promo ended.
Just triple checking that this is a legit site? I could reallllly use this money!
Edit: got a withdrawal this morning!!! It’s legit!!!! Edit2: got 2 withdrawals total, max of $2500 every week, but so far so good!
Edit 3: waiting on 3rd withdrawal now. Have $100k in winnings now from table games and slots in my account!!!
The immediate response he got was that Slotland was illegal in the US. In other words, chances are less that he would ever get paid the full amount. May be a few thousand after every week or two to keep the PR spin machine running. I mean they have to look honest in front of the public.
There were also replies that questioned the bonus to start with:
There are precisely zero legitimate online casinos offering 300% bonuses with no max cashout.
You are not getting that money.
There was a another guy who echoed the sentiment:
So the question is are we able to withdrawal our winnings or not? I been on the site for a week now and have 2 withdrawals pending but I didn’t send my photo ID in yet because I’m skeptical is a identity scam as well
To which the OP replied:
I was similarly skeptical, but there was a huge play through requirement. I think mine was $30,000 required before you could make a withdrawal ( from a $200 initial deposit). Most probably don’t get through the play through.
Personally, I also doubt the OP would get paid the entire amount. May be he’ll gamble away more than half, while waiting for the processing time or weekly payout limits. This is what many casinos do. Kill the expectation using psychology.
Many degenerates can’t wait this long, and not gamble. I would imagine the majority would simply start betting the won money again, giving back considerable portions of their winnings, if not all.
So, in the end the casino wins and can’t be blamed for it. Perfect. That’s Game Theory at play.
I’m personally OK with Slotland, as long as one doesn’t have huge hopes
Regardless of how Slotland operates – like it’s got no valid license to operate in the US – it’s been around for more than two decades. This in itself is a huge feat, and credit should be given where it’s due.
Do I expect myself playing at this place for a long time. No, not at all. For a few bucks here and there. May be I would. And I did. But, I don’t think it’s got the personality that attracts the younger segment, or even the adroit slot addicts, simply because it refuses to board the current times.
For starters a modern website design is a must. Also, being an outcast doesn’t help. They need to build solid relationships with top iGaming companies; open up their doors to the latest technologies; increase the number of titles on their roster.
A makeover is what’s needed for Slotland. Badly.
But, I don’t actually believe they want that, or are even mentally ready for this change. For them living in the early 2000s is where it’s at.
It’s up to them, whether they opt for a radical shift in their image, or choose to live in the ancient times, as the large droves of new US gamblers rapidly move on to the likes of FanDuel and Stake.