Matrix Casino Scam: What a Ripoff!

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October 19th, 2017
Back Matrix Casino Scam: What a Ripoff!

Is there an end to these sham sites, or has the time come to brace ourselves for the torrents of rogue flooding our beloved iGaming domain? Our investigative team, tasked with software inspection, can't get a moment's rest from the tenacious pests that are these pretend-casinos with their bogus games and ridiculous terms. This is a third warning report in the past few days alone, starring Matrix Casino and their sorry attempt to trick players into thinking their Net Entertainment and Novomatic slots are genuine.

The Pattern Emerges

Key features of the site all point to a particular rogue mold we have seen many times before, and surely our experienced members will recognize the suspicious layout, license info, games and terms of use. In recent times, there have been quite a few casinos operated by Russian groups and ''licensed through Costa Rica'', offering pirated slots and enforcing extremely predatory/ambiguous/barely comprehensible rules in a poorly written version of the English language.

Matrix dedicates a separate tab to the license information and what is supposed to be the proof of its authenticity, which, we suppose, should serve as some kind of testament to their legalized and honest background. Unfortunately for them, the Costa Rica e-gaming license is worth less than ZILCH! To be completely blunt, the country does not even have a gaming jurisdiction, or any other entity empowered by the official law to regulate or supervise online gambling sites.

They claim to be licensed through a white label company called World Gaming System Company Group, registered in Latvia in 2016. Internet search procures almost no data about the owner or the casino itself. However, we do remember a certain site of dubious quality, bearing an uncanny resemblance to the busted Matrix. Now closed, Globus Casino was operated by the same white label group. This leads us to believe there is a very stubborn rogue organization, probably originating in Russia (Moscow time is referenced in the cash-out and banking section), that has been around for years, getting exposed, shutting down operations, and crawling out every now and then with a new sham site - basically a re-colored version of one and the same platform. It is simply amazing how blindly persistent they are in doing the same thing over and over again, all the while expecting different results! One would think they'd at least ditch Google Translate and hire a competent English-speaking person to clean up the messy pages.

Software Hoax

As expected, the Net Entertainment and Novomatic slots are NOT genuine. No surprise here, especially given how popular these two providers are among players, making them the favorite targets of pirates. Difficult to spot, the forgeries are close-to-identical copies of the genuine titles, and you can't hope to tell them apart just by playing. Although some glitches are possible with loading screens and interfaces, the infallible proof lies in the hosting servers.

Launched using http://supermegaslot.com/, the NetEnt slots are available in free-to-play and real-money modes. Both are hosted from fraudulent servers that have nothing to do with the official servers used by genuine providers: http://casinomodulle.com/. We know this is a crooked source, because the real one has only one 'L' instead of two. This exact domain is used by many other rogue casinos to launch and host bogus games, some of which LCB has already exposed in the past: WinnerMillion and 1xbit.com

Fake NetEnt slot in fun mode:

Real money mode reveals a fake domain:

Fake Novomatic games are launched from a completely unknown domain, http://supermegaslot.com/, and hosted on http://tbs22tcp.dark-a.com/, which we have never seen or heard about, and which certainly have nothing in common with the official Novomatic's Greentube server.

Pirated Novomatic Book of Ra launching server:

fake book of ra supermegaslot domain

Unfriendly T&C

The horror doesn't end here. If you somehow fall for the fake software, the terms and conditions are where you will draw the line! Here's the most benign excerpt: ''Using casino bonuses to enrich an abuse'' - don't you just hate it when your abuse is not rich? Gambler's worst nightmare! Jokes aside, the folks behind Matrix Casino are up to no good - there is nothing positive about the site for players to even consider depositing there. A proper license, genuine software, and good quality design all cost money, which this operator obviously does not want to pay. Why should customers expect to receive any winnings from them?

Relevant links based on our report:

Matrix Casino is a Hoax! - Beware! - Report by bonusparadise.com

Another Hoax – Pirated Slots at Matrix Casino Exposed - Report by freeextrachips.com

“Matrix Casino and their sorry attempt to trick players”

Casino Warnings & Rogue Reports Predatory Terms
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