Volt, a KNF-licensed open-banking provider backed by top-tier investors appears in recorded deposit flows for illegal offshore casinos targeting users in Germany. FinTelegram’s review shows Volt’s checkout embedded in payment journeys routed through crypto-linked intermediaries, raising hard questions about merchant due diligence, payment blocking under German gambling law, and the compliance perimeter for regulated PISPs.
A follow-up review of SpinFin Casino (operating via SpinFin5.com) reveals a sophisticated evolution in payment routing designed to circumvent EU and UK regulatory oversight. The current infrastructure relies heavily on "Fake FIAT" rails—on-ramping processes where user deposits are instantly converted into cryptocurrencies (primarily USDC) via third-party agents before reaching the operator.
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.
FinTelegram’s PlatinCasino test reveals a “bank transfer” deposit flow that is, in substance, a fiat-to-crypto purchase executed via Bitcan Sp. z o.o. and ARI10’s gateway stack (including gatewaycpay.com and aripayments.com). The UX is likely to mislead players while routing stablecoins directly to a merchant wallet—turning regulated bank rails into a high-risk casino funding pipeline.
FinTelegram’s deposit-flow tests at PlatinCasino (platincasino.com) show a deliberately confusing payments stack: “bank transfers” that actually buy stablecoins and push them to wallets, plus “Sofort”/open-banking flows that route users through EU-regulated fintech rails. The result: an offshore casino can collect player funds across Europe while keeping onboarding friction—and KYC prompts—remarkably low.