Rank #53 · Operator profile
Spinlander
Fionex Holding LTD Anjouan licensee from September 2024 batch; returned HTTP 403 Forbidden from our test location.
- Licence
- Anjouan
- Test access
- HTTP 403 (Forbidden)
- Licence
- Anjouan
- Licence no.
- ALSI-202409044-FI2
- Licensee
- Fionex Holding LTD
- Domain
- spinlander.com
- KYC threshold
- Not visible from our test location
- Licence expires
- September 14, 2025
Spinlander operates under Anjouan licence ALSI-202409044-FI2, held by Fionex Holding LTD and issued in September 20241 . The brand launched in 2025, earlier than the licence might suggest, which is common when an operator obtains licensing in advance of a consumer-facing launch. The spinlander.com domain returned HTTP 403 (Forbidden) from our test location at time of writing. This is a profile, not a tested review.
The HTTP 403 pattern again
Spinlander joins the HTTP-403 cluster we’ve documented across Fano.bet, Holyluck, Likes.bet, and Honeymoney. All five share the same external-accessibility pattern: an HTTP 403 Forbidden response from our test IP, without the jurisdictional reasoning that an HTTP 451 would surface.
What this means in practice:
- The licence is valid on paper per the Anjouan register and Casino Guru aggregation.
- The consumer-facing surface is not externally readable from automated tooling.
- A real player connecting from the operator’s target IP class, which we have not identified, may see the lobby normally.
The 403 pattern is increasingly common in our coverage; we now count five distinct Anjouan licensees deploying this defensive posture against external scanning.
Fionex Holding LTD as an operator entity
“Fionex Holding LTD” follows the conventional-company-name format we noted in the RX Casino profile, distinct from the Costa Rican numeric-SRL pattern of most Anjouan licensees we cover. Without direct page-footer access (the 403 blocks our automated read), we cannot confirm the incorporation jurisdiction. Fionex Holding LTD is most plausibly incorporated in a UK / Cyprus / similar offshore corporate jurisdiction, though direct verification requires reading the operator’s own T&Cs.
The licence-vs-launch lag
ALSI-202409044-FI2 was issued in September 2024, but Casino Guru reports Spinlander’s launch year as 2025. The ~6-month lag between licence issuance and consumer launch is normal in Anjouan operator behaviour: licensees often secure regulatory authorisation while still building out infrastructure (payment processing, game integration, KYC tooling) before opening the consumer-facing lobby.
For a player, the 6-month operating history means Spinlander has slightly less track record than a 2022-launched brand and substantially less than a 2019/2020-launched operator like Tsars or Casoo. Combined with the 403 external-accessibility posture, prospective players have a thinner public-evidence base to work from.
What we cannot verify
The HTTP 403 prevents direct observation of the cashier surface, the licence number footer display, the operator entity acknowledgement, language localisation, currencies, or any product details. The Casino Guru aggregation is our primary source for licence-and-entity data.
What the Anjouan licence actually covers
Spinlander 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-202409044-FI2, 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.
Our analytical position
Spinlander is a 2024-licensed, 2025-launched Anjouan operator returning HTTP 403 from our test location. The licence number is externally verifiable via Casino Guru aggregation. Operator-entity disclosure is incomplete (jurisdiction of Fionex Holding LTD not verified). Score reflects: Anjouan-licensed baseline (neutral), verifiable licence number (positive), restrictive external response (negative for evaluability), recent licence and limited operator track record (mild negative), incomplete public-surface disclosure (mild negative).
Score: 5.0 / 10.
Frequently asked questions
Why did Spinlander return HTTP 403?
HTTP 403 (Forbidden) is the server refusing the request without surfacing a jurisdictional or credential reason. Consistent with bot-protection, application-layer geo-policy, or server configuration. Spinlander joins four other Anjouan operators with this response pattern in our coverage.
Who operates Spinlander?
Fionex Holding LTD, the named licensee on Anjouan ALSI-202409044-FI2. The incorporation jurisdiction of Fionex Holding LTD is not externally verified from the available aggregator data; check the operator's own T&Cs for direct disclosure.
Is Spinlander's licence still valid?
Per Casino Guru aggregation at time of writing, yes. ALSI-202409044-FI2 was issued in September 2024 under standard Anjouan renewal terms. Verify directly via the Anjouan register before depositing.
If I see a 403 when I visit spinlander.com, what does it mean?
The server is refusing your request. The cause may be bot-protection, geo-policy, VPN filtering, or a network-level block. Try from a different connection if you suspect VPN filtering; otherwise treat the brand as unreachable from your position.
When this might not apply to you
If you connect from the operator’s intended target IP class, the 403 may not appear. The Anjouan framework does not include cross-operator self-exclusion.
What to read next
- The RX Casino profile for another conventional-company-name Anjouan licensee.
- The Fano.bet profile for the cluster of HTTP 403 Anjouan operators.
- The Tsars profile for an older Anjouan property with verifiable consumer-facing surface.