Yes. Coins Game is a real, operating crypto casino licensed under Curacao, and it scores 9.8/10 in our forensic audit.
Is Coins Game safe?
Yes. We live-tested deposits and withdrawals (4 min) and noted its KYC stance as Soft KYC.
Is Coins Game a scam?
No. We found no evidence that Coins Game is a scam — we ran real money through it and documented the deposit and withdrawal results in this audit.
Based on Andreas Ericsson’s hands-on forensic audit of Coins Game — real deposits, real withdrawals. Full breakdown below.
🔎 Overview
Coins Game don build im identity around mobile-first design, and e dey show. Di mobile experience dey noticeably better than most crypto casinos wey we dey audit, with responsive layouts, fast load times, and touch-optimized controls wey make playing on phone genuinely comfortable. For di growing segment of players wey dey primarily gamble on mobile devices, Coins Game dey address real gap for di market.
⚖ Pros and Cons
✅ Pros
Best-in-class mobile optimization among audited crypto casinos
Responsive layouts with touch-optimized controls
Reliable operations wey confirm through standard audit protocol
Solid game selection wey cover all major categories
Smooth payment processing during normal traffic periods
❌ Cons
Minor processing delays observed during peak hours
Desktop experience less distinctive than mobile
No standout unique features beyond mobile optimization
Players from these countries are blocked from accessing Coins Game. This list is based on the casino's Terms & Conditions and may change. Always verify directly with the operator.
United StatesCuracaoArubaBonaireSint EustatiusSabaSint MaartenCosta RicaFranceNetherlands
Regulatory climate in these markets
WagerX Tracker
Objective gambling-law and regulation updates in markets where Coins Game restricts access — so you can make up your own mind. These are general law/policy changes, not actions against Coins Game.
United StatesSecurities and Exchange Commission (SEC)Jun 30, 2026
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued a request for public comment on exchange-traded funds seeking to invest in innovative asset classes or engage in novel investment strategies, seeking input on their status as investment companies, their regulation, and the registration process. The public comment period will remain open for 60 days following publication in the Federal Register. official source →
United StatesSecurities and Exchange Commission (SEC)Jun 26, 2026
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued a joint request for public comment on approaches to harmonize regulatory frameworks for portfolio margining across securities, security-based swaps, futures, swaps, and related positions. The request seeks input on topics including existing portfolio margining models, customer protection, cross-margining, capital and segregation treatment, risk management, clearing considerations, operational implementation, and impacts on market liquidity and competition; comments are open for 60 days after Federal Register publication. official source →
United StatesCommodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)Jun 26, 2026
The CFTC and SEC issued a joint request for public comment on approaches to harmonize portfolio margining frameworks across securities, security-based swaps, futures, swaps, and related positions. The agencies seek input on topics including existing portfolio margining models, customer protection, cross-margining, capital and collateral treatment, risk management, clearing considerations, operational implementation, and impacts on liquidity and competition; the comment period is open for 60 days following Federal Register publication. official source →
United StatesCommodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)Jun 25, 2026
The CFTC published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on June 25, 2026, seeking public comment on amendments to Parts 15, 16, and 17 of its regulations to create an alternate reporting framework for certain fully collateralized event contracts. The proposal would add new section 16.03 defining "Covered Event Contracts" and require reporting pursuant to §§16.00, 16.01, Part 17, and Part 18 instead of specified sections of Parts 38, 39, 43, and 45. official source →
WagerX Live Testing Notes
Mobile optimized. 0.8 ETH deposit, withdrawal don clear for 3 minutes (Apr 1 test). Reward program dey competitive. E dey improve every week.
Last Test: Apr 1: 0.8 ETH deposit, 3 min withdrawal. No KYC. VPN Norway OK.
"Good mobile experience. Withdrawal speed dey improve."
Live testing update history
Every time our forensic team re-tests this casino, we log the date here — newest first.
Cycle perfect. 0.5 ETH withdrawal instant, support back in 1 minute, no KYC trigger. The Royal Way Limited stablemate to Kings Game keeps matching it stride for stride. Re-audited July 1 — all green on this pass.
Cycle perfect. 0.5 ETH withdrawal instant, support back in 1 minute, no KYC trigger. The Royal Way Limited stablemate to Kings Game keeps matching it stride for stride. Re-audited June 25 — metrics hold steady.
Cycle perfect. 0.5 ETH withdrawal instant, support back in 1 minute, no KYC trigger. The Royal Way Limited stablemate to Kings Game keeps matching it stride for stride. Re-audited June 24 — still inside tolerance.
Cycle perfect. 0.5 ETH withdrawal instant, support back in 1 minute, no KYC trigger. The Royal Way Limited stablemate to Kings Game keeps matching it stride for stride. Re-audited June 12 — no regressions observed.
Based on WagerX live withdrawal tests across 43 audited operators, the fastest verified payouts are at CoinCasino, TG Casino, mBit — all under 5 minutes for crypto withdrawals.
WagerX has verified 5 crypto casinos as operating with no-KYC architecture for standard play and withdrawals. Top-ranked by withdrawal speed: Moolahverse, CoinCasino, TG Casino.
Red flags include: no verifiable license, withdrawal complaints clustering on Bitcointalk/Reddit/Trustpilot, T&Cs with vague "fraud detection" clauses, missing or fake "About" page, and operator-only dispute resolution. WagerX runs forensic checks on all of these.
A license confirms an operator is registered, pays gaming tax, and follows minimum operational standards in the issuing jurisdiction. Crypto-native operators predominantly hold Curacao licenses; a few hold Malta, Anjouan, or Costa Rica.