Rank #60 · Operator profile

Bety

Anjouan-licensed domain currently listed for sale at €189,715 on a public domain marketplace at time of writing.

Score
3.0/10
Bonus
Not applicable, the domain is not currently operating as a casino.
Status
Domain for sale
Licence
Anjouan (valid)
Licence
Anjouan
Licence no.
ALSI-132405043-FI3
Licensee
12 Stars International Technology Solutions Limited
Domain
bety.com
KYC threshold
Not applicable (no operating casino at the domain)
Licence expires
May 27, 2026
Check status
Marc Hessel Last reviewed May 22, 2026

Bety.com is one of four domains held by 12 Stars International Technology Solutions Limited under Anjouan licence ALSI-132405043-FI3 (issued 28 May 2024, valid through 27 May 2026)1 . The other three under the same licence are bet7ek.com, sikwin.com, and eagle777.com. At the time of writing, the bety.com domain is parked on the Dynadot marketplace and listed for sale at €189,715.122 rather than serving an operating casino. This makes Bety the unusual case where the licence record and the consumer-facing reality of the domain are out of sync, and it is worth understanding what that means before we score the operator.

The domain-for-sale finding

When we attempted to load bety.com to verify the operator’s published terms, the resolved page was not a casino lobby but a Dynadot marketplace listing offering the domain at €189,715.12. Dynadot is one of the larger domain marketplaces and the page is the standard “buy this domain” template, with no redirect or notice about the licensed operator. This raises an obvious question: if the brand is listed on the official Anjouan register as a licensed operating domain, why is the domain itself for sale and not running a casino?

Three explanations cover most of the plausible scenarios:

  1. The licensee never launched the bety.com brand. Operators sometimes license multiple domains at issue to protect future brand options and only actually operate a subset. 12 Stars International holds four domains under this licence; it may have rolled out one or two and reserved the rest.
  2. The brand was operated and then shut down or rebranded. The licensee could have run bety.com for some period and decided to wind it down, parking the domain for future sale while keeping the licence active in case the brand is revived.
  3. The licensee sold the brand to a third party. A new owner could be in the process of acquiring it via Dynadot, with the operating licence to transfer once the sale closes.
  4. The domain was lost and re-acquired by a third party. Less likely given the domain is for sale through a marketplace tied to the original registrar’s ecosystem, but possible if the licensee let registration lapse.

None of these are negative on the licensee’s behaviour in any clear way, but all of them mean the bety.com brand is not currently a place where a player can deposit and play. The licence register’s “valid” status reflects regulatory compliance with Anjouan, not consumer-facing availability of the brand.

What this means for a prospective player

If you arrived here looking for the Bety casino, perhaps from a search result, an old affiliate link, or marketing material, the operating brand is not available at bety.com at the time of writing. Three practical implications:

The 12 Stars International licensing footprint

12 Stars International Technology Solutions Limited is one of two licensees in the Anjouan register that uses a “Limited” suffix rather than a Costa Rican SRL/Limitada (the other is 28 International Gaming Limited, behind Betstrike). The “Limited” form usually indicates a UK / British Overseas Territory / Caribbean corporate vehicle rather than a Costa Rican shell. The licensee holds four domains under one licence, a brand-stable configuration similar to the multi-brand SRL pattern we discussed for Fenix.casino’s parent (six brands) and the eight-brand 3-102-937541 SRL stable.

The fact that at least two of the four domains under this licence (bety.com parked for sale, bet7ek.com not resolving) are not currently operating casinos is the structural concern. A licensee with four brand domains where half are off-line is either in transition or has overshot on domain reservations. The licence record gives this no nuance, all four domains read as “valid”, but the consumer-side reality is more textured.

What the Anjouan licence actually covers

Bety is licensed by the Anjouan Gaming Authority, the regulatory body established on the autonomous island of Anjouan (one of the three islands that make up the Union of the Comoros in the Indian Ocean). Anjouan's modern iGaming licensing framework was relaunched in 2023–2024 by Anjouan Licensing Services Inc., the exclusive licence administrator, and has been adopted at scale since by operators that previously sat under Curaçao's old master-licence system. The operator's licence number is ALSI-132405043-FI3, listed as valid on the official Anjouan licence register.

What the licence does

  • Operator vetting at issue. The framework requires KYC on beneficial owners and directors, clean criminal-record checks, source-of-funds documentation, a written business plan, and AML/KYC/responsible-gaming policies before the licence is issued.
  • Game-software certification. Operators must use certified RNG technology, with provider certificates submitted as part of the licensing pack.
  • Segregated player funds. Operators must hold player balances in accounts separate from operating funds. This is the single most consequential player-protection clause in the framework.
  • Formal complaint process. Operators must publish a complaint-handling procedure and respond to player disputes within the timeframes defined by the regulator.
  • Public register and seal verification. Every licensed operator appears on the official register with licence number, issue and expiry dates, status, and authorised domains. Operators may display a seal whose ID resolves to the register entry in real time.

What the licence does not do

  • No binding third-party adjudication. Anjouan provides a formal complaint process between player and operator, but it does not offer the binding ADR (alternative dispute resolution) tier that regulators like the UKGC or MGA mandate. If the operator refuses to pay, the regulator can revoke the licence — but does not order the operator to pay the player.
  • No deposit caps or central self-exclusion. Unlike MGA, UKGC, KSA, or Sweden's Spelpaus, Anjouan does not run a cross-operator self-exclusion register or impose mandatory deposit limits. Self-exclusion is a per-operator setting; players who want cross-operator protection have to rely on GamStop / Cruks / Spelpaus where applicable.
  • Disputes from excluded territories are not mediated. The Anjouan Gaming Board explicitly excludes mediation for players based in jurisdictions the operator was supposed to block. If you played from a restricted country, the regulator will decline the case.
  • No public dispute decisions database. There is no published archive of operator complaints and rulings comparable to the UKGC's enforcement-action page or the MGA's player-complaint summaries. Track-record information has to be reconstructed from third-party sources (Trustpilot, AskGamblers, casino-forum threads).
  • Limited recourse outside the licence. Anjouan's jurisdiction is the autonomous island, not the Comorian Union. Comorian union-level law treats most gambling as prohibited, which creates a structural mismatch: the licence is real and the regulator acts, but it operates entirely within the island's autonomy carve-out.

How this compares to other offshore licences

Anjouan sits in the same operational tier as the new Curaçao LOK framework (issued directly by the CGB since 2024, replacing the old master/sub-licence system) and Tobique (Canadian First Nation regulator that took over from Kahnawake for many crypto operators). All three offer real but light-touch licensing: operator vetting at issue, mandated segregated funds, formal complaint handling, no binding third-party arbitration, and minimal ongoing player-protection infrastructure compared to MGA, UKGC, or KSA.

In practical terms: an Anjouan licence means the operator has been vetted by a regulator that exists, will respond, and can revoke. It does not mean a player will be made whole by the regulator if the operator decides not to pay. Players who want that should play at UKGC, MGA, or comparable-tier operators, accepting the friction (KYC at every turn, withdrawal holds, deposit limits) that comes with that protection.

How this differs from other operators in our coverage

Most operator profiles on this site cover operating casinos with public lobbies and surfaced T&Cs. The Bety case is different in kind: the licence is valid and listed, but there is no operating casino at the consumer-facing domain. We’re profiling it because:

Our analytical position

Bety is the unusual case where the licence is current but the consumer-facing brand is not currently operating. The Dynadot marketplace listing at €189,715 is the authoritative current state. We do not recommend depositing at any site currently claiming to be Bety.com until the domain ownership settles and the licence register reflects the actual operator. The 12 Stars International estate appears to be in transition. Score reflects: licence current and listed (neutral baseline), domain parked for sale rather than operating (significant negative), unclear status of sister domains under the same licensee (negative), no consumer-facing harm because there is no operator to deposit at (neutral).

Score: 3.0 / 10, score reflects the consumer-facing absence of an operating casino, not negative behaviour by the licensee. If 12 Stars International relaunches Bety under the same licence with a clean operating model, the score is provisional and will move.

Frequently asked questions

Is Bety casino currently operating?

Not at bety.com at the time of writing. The domain is listed for sale on the Dynadot marketplace at €189,715.12, not running a casino lobby. The Anjouan licence remains valid on paper but the consumer-facing brand is not available.

What does it mean that the licence is valid but the domain is for sale?

The Anjouan register tracks regulatory compliance, not consumer availability. A licensee can hold a valid licence on a domain it is not currently operating. The most likely explanation is that 12 Stars International never launched Bety, has wound it down, or is in the middle of a brand-sale transaction; we do not have public information to determine which.

Should I deposit at a Bety casino if I find one online?

We would not. Until the domain ownership settles and the licence register reflects the actual operator, any site claiming to be Bety.com is operating in a state where the regulatory record and the consumer-facing operation are not in sync. Wait until both align before considering a deposit.

Are the other 12 Stars International brands operating?

Our test-time check of bet7ek.com (also under this licence) also did not resolve to an operating casino. We did not verify sikwin.com or eagle777.com for this profile. The 12 Stars International estate appears to be in some state of transition.

Who is 12 Stars International Technology Solutions Limited?

The licensee on record for ALSI-132405043-FI3. The Limited corporate suffix suggests a UK or British Overseas Territory company form rather than the more common Costa Rican SRL used by most operators in the register. We have not independently verified the company's registration jurisdiction.

When this might not apply to you

If you arrived here from an old affiliate link or marketing material for Bety, the brand was at some point intended to operate. The current state may change at any time if the domain is sold or the licensee relaunches.

References

  1. Anjouan licence register entry (12 Stars International) , Anjouan Gaming Authority
  2. Dynadot domain marketplace listing for bety.com , Dynadot