Mr Vegas Casino sister sites: the confirmed group
Sister sites are about evidence, not guesswork. This page shows which brands genuinely share the Mr Vegas operator, why that affects self-exclusion and bonuses, and how to verify any sister-site claim yourself.
Confirmed and unconfirmed relationships
A sister-site page is only useful if it is honest about evidence. We only call a brand a sister site where operator, licence or ownership evidence supports it. From our checks of the public register, Mr Vegas (mrvegas.com) sits under Videoslots Limited, the same operator behind Videoslots and Mega Riches, so those are the closest confirmed siblings. Other casinos sometimes listed as Mr Vegas alternatives are just that, alternatives, not proven sisters, and we label them accordingly. Ownership can change, so treat this as a snapshot and verify on the UKGC register if it matters.
| Brand | Relationship | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| Videoslots | Same operator (Videoslots Limited) | High, from register checks |
| Mega Riches | Same group | High, from register checks |
| Other "alternative" lists | Marketing comparisons, not proven sisters | Treat as unconfirmed |
Why sister sites matter to you
This is not trivia. A shared operator means shared consequences. The most important is self-exclusion: a single GamStop block, or an operator-level exclusion, covers every brand in the group at once, so you cannot leave Mr Vegas and reopen at a sister site. Bonus eligibility can also be shared, meaning a welcome offer claimed at one brand may not be available again at another. And if you ever raise a complaint, the same operator and complaints route apply across the family.
| Area | What carries across the group |
|---|---|
| Self-exclusion | A GamStop block covers all UK brands together |
| Duplicate accounts | One account per person across the group is expected |
| Bonus eligibility | Welcome offers may not repeat across siblings |
| Complaints route | The same operator and ADR apply |
Should you play a sister site instead?
If you like Mr Vegas but want to compare, the genuine siblings are a reasonable place to look because they sit under the same regulated operator, which means the same UK protections, the same complaints route and broadly the same standards of fairness. The trade-off is that the things you might dislike about one brand, such as the bonus wagering or the first-cashout review, tend to carry across the group, because they come from shared operator policy rather than the individual site. In other words, switching to a sister brand changes the theme and the lobby, not the underlying rules. If your issue is with the operator's payout process, a sibling will not fix it, and an unrelated, separately operated UK casino may suit you better.
There is also a self-exclusion angle worth repeating. Because a GamStop block covers the whole group, you cannot use a sister site as a way back in after excluding yourself, and you should not try to. If you are comparing simply to find a better fit, weigh the licence, the game range and the payment options rather than the surface design, and always confirm the operator on the register first.
How to confirm a sister-site claim yourself
Search the UK Gambling Commission public register for the operator name on each brand's footer. If two casinos show the same licensee, they are genuinely related. If a listing cannot show shared ownership, treat the "sister site" label as marketing.
Visit Mr Vegas Casino
Know the group before you play, especially if you have used a self-exclusion.
Related reading
Because the group shares a self-exclusion, the is Mr Vegas on GamStop page is essential reading here. For the brand itself, see the full review and the legitimacy check.
Play one brand, within limits
If Mr Vegas suits you, open it. The sister brands share the same protections and rules.

