Rank #45 · Operator profile
Chancebit
Single-domain Anjouan licensee with crypto-coded naming. Domain did not resolve from our test location at time of writing.
- Licence
- Anjouan
- Test access
- Did not resolve
- Licence
- Anjouan
- Licence no.
- ALSI-202512010-FI1
- Licensee
- 3-102-936714 SRL
- Domain
- chancebit.com
- KYC threshold
- Not visible from our test location
- Licence expires
- December 14, 2026
Chancebit operates under Anjouan licence ALSI-202512010-FI1, issued 15 December 2025 to Costa Rican entity 3-102-936714 SRL and valid through 14 December 20261 . The brand name combines “chance” (gambling outcome) with “bit” (crypto-bit-coin coding), reading as a crypto-native brand. The licensee holds only this single domain. The domain did not resolve from our test location at the time of writing. The licence is very recent (less than six months at time of writing). This is a profile, not a tested review.
A licence under six months old is its own data point
Chancebit’s December 2025 licence makes it one of the youngest operators in our coverage. The Anjouan framework was issuing licences rapidly through late 2025; Chancebit is part of that cohort. A licence under six months old means:
- The operator has cleared the regulator’s initial vetting (operator KYC, source-of-funds documentation, AML / responsible-gaming policy submission).
- The operator has not yet been through a renewal cycle (the first happens at the 12-month mark).
- Operational track record at the brand level is by definition short.
- Public sentiment data (Trustpilot, complaint boards) is necessarily thin.
Combined with “domain did not resolve at our test time”, we have less to work with than for older or accessible operators.
What we can extract from the licence record alone
When operator-side content is not available, the licence record is the entire verifiable surface. For Chancebit:
- Single-purpose licensee.
3-102-936714 SRLholds only the chancebit.com licence per the register. This is the focused-licensee structural pattern, which is the cleaner end of the spectrum than multi-brand stables. - Standard
-FI1licence type. Same sub-category as most operators issued in the 2025 cohort. - Most-recent issue date in our batch. Chancebit’s December 2025 issue is later than any other operator in either of our published batches.
The brand naming (chance + bit) is consistent with crypto-native positioning, but this is naming-convention interpretation only; we did not load the lobby.
The licensee structure
3-102-936714 SRL is a single-purpose Costa Rican SRL holding exactly one Anjouan domain. Standard focused-licensee structure, which is the favourable end of the spectrum.
What the Anjouan licence actually covers
Chancebit 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-202512010-FI1, 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 Chancebit compares to peers
Within the recent-licence cohort (operators licensed in Q4 2025), Chancebit is the most-recent. Within the unreachable-from-our-test-location bucket, it shares structural similarity with Betcina, W11, and the partially-blocked operators in this batch.
Within the crypto-named brand category, the natural comparisons are Betstrike (bet + strike) and W11 (.io TLD coding). Betstrike is operating, accessible, and has proprietary games; Chancebit is unverified.
Our analytical position
Chancebit is a very recently-licensed Anjouan operator (December 2025), single-domain focused-licensee structure, crypto-coded brand naming, and not accessible from our test location. The structural positives (focused licensee, current licence) are real but minimal; the access gap and short track record are the dominant analytical constraints. Score reflects: focused single-brand licensee (positive), current licence (neutral baseline), unverifiable operator-side claims (neutral negative), very short operating tenure (neutral but unavoidable for a recent licensee), domain unreachable at test time (mild negative).
Score: 5.5 / 10, provisional, will revise when the operator is reachable for inspection.
Frequently asked questions
Is Chancebit currently operating?
The licence is valid on the Anjouan register (issued December 2025) but the domain did not resolve from our test location at time of writing. We could not determine from a single test whether the operator is geo-restricting, in launch state, in maintenance, or dormant.
How old is the Chancebit licence?
Less than six months at the time of writing. Licence ALSI-202512010-FI1 was issued 15 December 2025 and runs to 14 December 2026. This makes Chancebit the most-recently-licensed operator in our coverage to date.
Who is 3-102-936714 SRL?
A single-purpose Costa Rican Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada holding only the chancebit.com Anjouan licence per the register. Standard structure for offshore licence-holding shell entities.
Is Chancebit a crypto casino?
The brand name suggests crypto positioning (chance + bit) but we did not verify the actual product or payment mix from our test location. The naming is consistent with crypto-native operators but does not prove cryptocurrency support.
When this might not apply to you
Your location may resolve the domain. If you can verify the operator’s published T&Cs, payment rails, and KYC behaviour, you are in a better position to evaluate than we are from a non-resolving DNS state.
What to read next
- The Betstrike profile for a crypto-native Anjouan operator that is accessible and has proprietary games.
- The Betcina profile for another unreachable Anjouan operator profile.
References
- Anjouan licence register entry (3-102-936714 SRL) , Anjouan Gaming Authority