1st.Game is a crypto casino and sportsbook owned by Omnispect B.V., registered in Curaçao (company number 165406, Abraham de Veerstraat 9, Willemstad). It launched recently and appears to target Southeast and East Asian players primarily, though it accepts registrations from many other regions.
Official Website
https://1st.game/

The site looks professional and runs well. But before we get into the details, you should know upfront that this casino launched with a significant number of red flags – fake-looking bet data on the homepage, broken Terms links, unverified celebrity endorsement claims, a removed Trustpilot profile, and a forum announcement that went silent for nearly a week before the operator responded. Some of these have since been addressed. Others haven’t.
Games
The game library is genuinely one of the best things about this casino. Over 3,000 titles across slots, live casino, fast games, fishing, lottery, and a sportsbook.
Slots
Slots come from a strong lineup – Pragmatic Play, PG Soft, Hacksaw Gaming, Nolimit City, Betsoft, NetEnt, Relax Gaming, Big Time Gaming, Habanero, Spinomenal, Red Tiger, Microgaming, Endorphina, Playson, and more. Asian-market providers are also well represented: JILI, JDB, FC, CQ9, Spadegaming, Nextspin, Rich88. If slots are your thing, the selection is hard to fault.
Live Casino
Live casino is powered mainly by Evolution and Pragmatic Play, with additional tables from Dream Gaming, Microgaming, Sexy Gaming, SV388, and TVBET. You get the full range – blackjack, baccarat, roulette, poker, and game shows like Crazy Time, Funky Time, Monopoly Live, and Sweet Bonanza Candyland. The live section is well-stocked.
Fast Games
Fast games covers crash-style titles like Aviator, JetX, Avia Masters, Galaxy Burst, and Vortex, plus mines, plinko, hilo, and tower games. Good variety for players who like quick rounds.
Lottery
The Lottery section is unusual and clearly designed for Asian players. It includes Thai Lotto, Lao Lotto, Hanoi Lotto, Yeekee, and a long list of stock market lottery games based on real indices – Dow Jones, Korea Stock, Singapore Stock, Germany Stock, Russia Stock, and more. These are essentially number-draw gambling products dressed up with national themes. You won’t find this kind of section at most crypto casinos, and it’s a genuine differentiator for the target audience.
Fishing
Fishing games are a full category here, with titles from JILI, JDB, Spadegaming, CQ9, Evoplay, and FC. Again, primarily an Asian market product, but there’s real depth.
The Bounty system adds a layer on top of regular gameplay – certain games have target multiplier challenges attached to them. Hit the target multiplier with the minimum required bet and you earn a cash reward on top of your winnings. Rewards range from under $2 up to $500 for the hardest targets. It’s a smart engagement mechanic and genuinely adds value for regular players.
One thing worth flagging: when the site launched, the homepage displayed a live bets ticker showing $0 bets with 0.00x multipliers somehow resulting in positive winnings, mathematically impossible multiplier values, and multipliers with three decimal places that don’t exist in the actual games. This was documented publicly by community members. The casino has not formally addressed this. Whether it’s been fixed or was always just a display bug, it was a serious credibility problem at launch.
Bonuses
There’s a lot going on in the promotions department, and not all of it is as good as it looks.
The Bonus Store sells slot bonuses using real money. The headline offer is a 180% slot bonus with a minimum $10 buy-in. It sounds attractive until you see the terms: 30x wagering requirement, maximum cashout capped at just 5x the bonus amount, and a 30-day completion window. The casino itself discloses that only approximately 15% of players who take this bonus manage to cash out. That means 85 out of 100 players lose their $10 and get nothing back. The casino deserves credit for publishing that figure – most don’t – but the bonus itself is a bad deal for most players.
The smaller Bonus Store options are more reasonable. The 20% bonus requires 9x wagering with a 10x max cashout, and about 65% of players complete it. The 25% option is 12x wagering, 10x max cashout, 55% completion. The 30% option is 15x wagering, 10x max cashout, 45% completion. If you’re going to use the Bonus Store at all, these three are far better value than the flagship 180% offer.
The daily deposit promotion gives +3% back every day and an extra +5% on your first crypto deposit. These are simple and don’t come with obvious traps.
There’s a referral program offering $1,200 plus 1% ongoing commission on referred players’ activity. The commission stacks with a booster mechanic – every time a referral deposits, you get doubled rakeback for three hours. If you have a network of players to bring in, this is meaningful.
The weekly Rake Race has a $100,000 prize pool paid to the top 1,000 players. First place takes $22,000.
The VIP system spans 125 levels – more than any other casino we’ve encountered. That sounds impressive, but the actual benefits at low levels are almost symbolic. Level-up bonuses start at $0.10 for VIP 1 and reach $0.40 at VIP 7. The Super Rakeback formula is Wager × 2.5% × Rakeback Rate. At VIP 0–40, your rakeback rate is 20%, meaning you get back roughly 0.5% of every bet. That only grows to a meaningful 1.5% at the very top tier (VIP 101–125). To unlock the Mystery Box you need VIP 5. VIP Monday weekly bonuses require VIP 2 and a minimum $300 wagered in the prior week. Lucky Number Seven requires VIP 7. The system is clearly built for long-term high-volume players, not casual depositors.
Check-in streaks, free spins, achievements, buddy balls, and promo codes via social media round out the promotions. None of these are unusual, but they add up to a reasonably active promotions schedule for a new casino.
Deposits
The crypto deposit options are solid: USDT, USDC, ETH, BTC, BNB, SOL, TRX, GRAM, and NOT. There’s also a fiat tab for bank transfers in supported regions – the casino detects your location and shows local payment methods automatically, which is a useful feature.
No deposit fees from the casino side, though network fees from your own wallet still apply. There’s a minimum deposit per currency – check before you send. If you send below the minimum, your funds are gone with no refund.
Deposits convert to USDT display value at real-time exchange rates.
Withdrawals
This is where you need to read carefully, because the terms give the casino a lot of flexibility and you very little.
Before any withdrawal is approved, you must wager 100% of your total deposit at least once. Deposit $500, you need to bet at least $500 total. This applies to every single deposit, every time.
Processing time is listed as up to 24 hours normally, but can extend to 7 days or longer if the risk department decides to review your account. There’s no stated upper limit on how long this can take. The casino can hold your withdrawal indefinitely while an investigation is underway.
There’s a hard maximum win cap of $300,000. If you win more than that on any single bet or spin – including bonus rounds and purchased free spins – the casino can cut your payout to $300,000 and keep the difference. They can also pay this maximum in installments spread over up to 90 days. The terms actually state that if you complain after receiving written notice of this cap being applied, it may be treated as evidence of “extortion.”
If you win in a low-liquidity cryptocurrency, the casino can convert your payout to USDT at an internally determined exchange rate. You have no right to appeal this decision.
Withdrawal fees can change at any time without notice. If you want to withdraw to a different wallet than the one you deposited from, the casino can refuse and require you to use the original wallet. Large wins can be paid in installments over up to 90 days at the casino’s discretion.
KYC
Identity verification can be triggered at any point – before you deposit, while you’re playing, or when you try to withdraw. There’s no published threshold. It’s entirely at the risk department’s discretion.
Standard KYC requires a government-issued photo ID and proof of address. The casino can also ask you to prove your source of funds and source of income, particularly for larger amounts.
Once KYC is requested, you have 7 days to give an initial response and 30 days total to complete the process. If you don’t comply within those windows, your account can be permanently closed. The terms don’t explicitly state whether your deposited funds would be returned in this scenario, which is a concern.
Restricted Countries and VPN
The casino doesn’t publish a named list of restricted countries anywhere easy to find. The Terms refer to “Restricted Jurisdictions” without specifying them. Based on the Curaçao license and standard industry practice, players from the United States, United Kingdom, Netherlands, France, Australia, and various other regulated markets are typically excluded. If you’re in a country with strict gambling laws, assume you’re restricted unless you can confirm otherwise.
Don’t use a VPN to access the casino from a blocked region. If caught, the casino can close your account immediately and confiscate all funds, including deposits and winnings. Because you breached the Terms, you’d have no practical recourse.
Red Flags
The Trustpilot profile for 1st.Game has been removed. The casino hasn’t explained why. Trustpilot removes profiles due to policy violations, which is not reassuring for a brand-new casino.
At launch, the homepage displayed a live bets ticker with mathematically impossible data – $0 bets winning positive amounts, wrong multipliers, and multiplier values with three decimal places that don’t exist in the referenced games. The casino has not formally addressed it.
The casino’s forum announcement used AI-generated text, which forum members identified and criticized. More importantly, the operator didn’t respond to community questions for nearly six days after posting.
The casino features images strongly implying that footballer Luis Suárez is a brand ambassador and that it has a sponsorship relationship with the Argentine Football Association. When challenged on this, the casino confirmed these are genuine partnerships and cited its membership in the OKVIP Alliance, which does have a documented AFA sponsorship deal. However, OKVIP Alliance’s own website doesn’t list 1st.Game, and no independent source confirms Suárez’s involvement. These claims remain unverified.
A user with very low account activity posted a suspiciously positive review of the casino shortly after these concerns were raised – consistent with shill behavior, though not confirmed.
There’s no publicly verifiable track record of players being paid. No payout history, no credible positive reviews outside of the one suspicious forum post.
Customer Support
24/7 live chat is available directly on the site and accessible without registering. Response quality and speed haven’t been independently tested for this review.
Final Verdict
1st.Game has a legitimately impressive game library, a slick interface, and a promotions system with more depth than most new casinos. If the platform is what it claims to be, there’s a real casino here worth exploring.
But the trust picture is genuinely concerning for a new operator. The combination of fake-looking launch data, unverified ambassador claims, a removed Trustpilot profile, AI-generated communications, prolonged silence on community questions, and minimal player protection adds up to a risk profile we can’t ignore.
The withdrawal terms deserve particular attention. The casino has broad discretion to delay payments, convert currencies at internal rates, cap winnings, pay in installments, and require KYC at any stage – all with limited ability for players to challenge these decisions.
Until this casino builds a real track record of paying players, treat it as high-risk.
