We investigated Spinexia.vip Casino on May 11, 2026, and the final recommendation is clear: players should avoid this casino.
Spinexia.vip presents itself as a legitimate crypto gambling platform with licenses, industry recognition, trusted providers, and even supposed international expansion. On the surface, it tries very hard to look established and professional. But once we started checking the details one by one, the cracks became obvious very quickly. The more we reviewed the website, the more inconsistencies appeared across its licensing claims, ownership information, games, player reviews, affiliate program, and even the news articles published on the site itself.
The domain itself was only registered on March 20, 2026, yet parts of the website try to create the impression that the platform has existed for years. At the same time, the site claims connections to known gambling companies and regulators that do not appear to be genuine.
The Licensing Situation Makes No Sense
One of the first things we checked was the licensing information displayed across the website. Spinexia.vip claims connections to the Curaçao Gaming Authority and the UK Gambling Commission. According to the investigation, neither claim checks out.

What makes the situation even stranger is that the website uses different company names and different license numbers depending on which page you visit.
In the footer and on the Licenses and Security page, Spinexia.vip claims the casino is owned and operated by TechSolutions Group N.V. and references license number OGL/ 2024/590/0758. According to the official records of the Curaçao Gaming Authority, the license number OGL/2024/590/0758 is registered to TechSolutions Group N.V.

The footer specifically states:
“Spinexia.vip is owned and operated by TechSolutions Group N.V., registration number: 144920, registered address: Abraham Mendez Chumaceiro Boulevard 50, Willemstad, Curaçao. Payment agent company is TechSolutions (CY) Group Limited with address Parthenonos 5, PARNERA GARDENS 11, Flat 103, Strovolos, 2020 Nicosia, Cyprus and Registration number: HE 377018.”

But when we checked the Terms and Conditions page, the operator suddenly changed. There, the website says:
“Medium Rare N.V. has an application (OGL/2024/1451/0918) for a gaming license in progress with the Curaçao Gaming Authority. Until that process is concluded, based on a transitional arrangement outlined in the National Ordinance on Games of Chance (Landsverordening op de Kansspelen, P.B. 2024, no. 157), the company is permitted to continue its operations under this Certificate of Operation.”

So now we suddenly have two separate companies and two different license numbers connected to the same casino.
That alone would already be confusing enough for players trying to figure out who is actually behind the site. But it gets worse once the details are checked against official records.
According to the official Curaçao Gaming Authority (CGA) website, license number OGL/2024/1451/0918 belongs to Medium Rare N.V., but that license expired on December 9, 2025.

Spinexia.vip is not connected to TechSolutions Group N.V. despite repeatedly presenting itself as if it were part of that company. LCB found no evidence of affiliation, partnership, or ownership ties between Spinexia.vip and TechSolutions Group N.V.
That matters because TechSolutions Group N.V. is associated with actual gambling brands such as 22Bet, 20BET, National Casino, and Bizzo Casino. Using the company’s name on the website creates the impression that Spinexia.vip belongs to a known gambling operation when the investigation says there is no evidence supporting that connection.

The UKGC claim also failed verification. Despite references to the UK Gambling Commission on the website, Spinexia.vip is not licensed or regulated by the UKGC.
The “Verification” Process Is One of the Biggest Red Flags
One part of the investigation that players should pay close attention to is the account verification process shown inside the casino itself.
Players entering the Verification section are guided through four separate steps.
Step one is simple. Players click a “Verify Now” button.

Step two asks for standard personal information such as full name, country of residence, and date of birth. So far, that may look normal to some users.

Step three shows a message saying:
“We check your details for verification. It will take no more than 5 minutes. You can follow the verification status on this page.”

Then comes step four, which completely changes the situation.
The website states:
“A simplified online verification procedure that requires you to make a deposit of $150 or more. Once the deposit is credited to your balance, verification will be completed.”

That is the point where players should immediately stop.
Licensed casinos do not require players to deposit money just to complete identity verification. Legitimate KYC procedures involve identity documents, proof of address, and payment verification checks. They do not demand an extra deposit to “unlock” verification.
Some legitimate casinos may ask for a small verification deposit in certain no-deposit bonus situations, but there is an important difference: legitimate operators return that deposit together with the player’s withdrawal. It is not used as a barrier preventing access to winnings.
The Spinexia.vip process follows a scam pattern that has appeared many times before. The site may offer no-deposit bonuses, allow players to build up what appears to be a large balance, then block withdrawals until a “verification deposit” is made. Funds are then never released, after which the domain may eventually disappear and reappear under another name.
We Also Found Fake Games From Major Providers
Another serious problem we uncovered involves the games themselves.
During our checks, we confirmed that Spinexia.vip was using fake or unauthorized versions of games connected to several well-known providers, including Pragmatic Play, Hacksaw Gaming, BGaming, Evoplay, 1Win, and Mirror Image Gaming.
Pragmatic Play

Evoplay

BGaming

1Win Games

Mirror Image Gaming

Hacksaw Gaming

We identified technical signs showing that the games were not being delivered through official provider systems.
The evidence included:
- Manipulated JavaScript files
- Missing official provider servers
- Mismatched game sources
When you play at a properly licensed casino using official provider integrations, the games connect directly to the provider’s systems. That creates accountability because the casino cannot simply alter game behavior on its own.
With fake or unauthorized versions, that layer of trust disappears completely.
The News Section Appears Designed to Create Fake Credibility
One of the more unusual things we noticed was the amount of misleading content published in the casino’s own news section.

The articles appear designed to make Spinexia.vip look bigger, more established, and more recognized than it actually is.
One article claimed Spinexia.vip had been added to Brazil’s list of approved gambling operators. We checked the official Brazilian government register and Spinexia.vip was not listed there. The article also ignored the fact that licensed Brazilian operators generally use the “.bet.br” domain structure assigned to approved operators.

Another article claimed Spinexia.vip was the “Best Crypto Casino in 2025” and used SiGMA Awards Europe branding to support the claim.
That was also false.
The official SiGMA Awards 2025 results show that BC.GAME won the Best Crypto Casino 2025 award, not Spinexia.vip.

The website also published an article titled “Spinexia Expands to Italy: A Bold Step into New Horizons.”
Again, the claim did not hold up when checked. Spinexia.vip was not listed in the official ADM register of licensed gambling operators in Italy.
Taken together, these articles create a pattern. The site repeatedly publishes content that tries to make players believe the casino is officially recognized, internationally licensed, and publicly acknowledged inside the gambling industry when those claims could not be verified.
The Player Reviews Look Made Up
The Feedback page on the website raises another obvious problem.

Every review shown was positive and rated five stars. That alone already looks suspicious, but the bigger issue was the timeline attached to some of the reviews.
Several supposed players claimed they had been members since 2017.
That would be impossible because the Spinexia.vip domain was only registered on March 20, 2026.
This strongly suggests the testimonials were fabricated to make the casino appear older and more trusted than it really is.
The Affiliate Program Claims Could Not Be Verified
Spinexia.vip also promotes what it calls a casino affiliate program.

According to the claims shown, affiliates could supposedly earn guaranteed payments of $10 per registered player plus ongoing earnings of 0.001% of all bets. The website also references transparent accounting and fast payouts.
We could not verify any of it.
No legitimate affiliate platform, recognized tracking system, licensing documentation, or reputable industry references were found confirming that the affiliate program actually exists as presented.
That does not automatically prove nobody was paid anything. But it does mean there was no reliable evidence supporting the claims being advertised on the site.
The Betting Activity Displayed on the Website Looks Unrealistic
Spinexia.vip also displays streams of supposed player bets and winnings across the platform.

The problem is that many of the numbers shown appear unrealistic.
We noticed unusually large bet sizes, repeated big wins, and patterns that did not resemble normal gambling activity. According to our checks, the consistency and frequency of these displayed results raised doubts about whether they reflected genuine player activity at all.
That matters because these kinds of displays are often used to influence player behavior.
When users constantly see huge wins appearing on screen, it can create the impression that players are regularly making money on the platform, even if the displayed activity is not genuine.
Conclusion
After reviewing the entire website, we found problems across almost every major area players normally rely on when deciding whether a casino can be trusted.
The licensing information conflicted across different pages. Company ownership claims did not match official records. The site referenced companies and licenses it did not appear connected to. The UKGC claims did not hold up. The games showed technical signs associated with fake or unauthorized integrations. The news section contained misleading claims about awards, regulation, and expansion. The player reviews appeared fabricated. The affiliate program could not be verified. The verification process demanded a large deposit just to “complete” verification.
Taken together, these are not small issues or isolated mistakes.
Players should stay away from Spinexia.vip.
Before registering or depositing at any online casino, we recommend using LCB Casino Check to search the casino first and see whether it has already been reviewed, verified, flagged, or discussed by the LCB team and players. The tool was built to help players quickly check important trust signals in one place, including licensing details, ownership information, software providers, player feedback, complaint history, fake game concerns, and other warning signs that may not be obvious at first glance. If you cannot find a casino in the database, you can also submit a verification request directly to the LCB team for review.
We also recommend reading the detailed investigations and updates published in the LCB Casino Check News Section because they show real examples of how suspicious casinos operate, how fake provider setups and misleading claims are uncovered, and what players should watch out for before risking real money online.
njanjam
27 days ago
Moderator
This is exactly why players should always double-check licenses and ownership before depositing. More and more fake “professional-looking” casinos are appearing lately.
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