The short version
BC.Game is the biggest product in our index attached to the most complicated trust file. The numbers on the product side are unmatched: 10,000+ games from around 100 providers, support for 150+ cryptocurrencies — the widest coin coverage of any major brand — and provably fair BC Originals. The number on the other side is smaller and heavier: a disputed 2024 Curaçao bankruptcy order over roughly $2M in player claims, followed by a move to a weaker Anjouan license.
The CC Index lands at 8.5/10. Games (9.5) and bonus value (8.9) pull up; trust (7.4) — the lowest trust subscore among the major brands we cover — pulls down. Both halves of that math deserve to be read in full, so this review does not bury either one.
The 2024 bankruptcy saga, in plain terms
The single most important fact about BC.Game is not a game count. In 2024, a Curaçao court issued a bankruptcy order against the operator in a dispute over roughly $2 million in player claims. BC.Game disputed the order and continued operating, and it subsequently left Curaçao for an Anjouan license (ALSI-202410011-FI1) held by Twocent Technology Limited.
Two things can be true at once. The site never stopped paying its broad player base, and the brand remains one of the largest in crypto gambling. And: a contested court order over player funds, resolved by relocating to a lighter regulator rather than by staying under the original one, is exactly the pattern our methodology penalizes. Anjouan licensing is functional but offers players less recourse than Curaçao’s reformed GCB regime. According to our July 2026 assessment, that history is worth roughly two full points of trust versus a clean veteran — which is the gap you see between BC.Game’s 7.4 and the 9.3-9.4 of Cloudbet or Stake.
The library: where BC.Game actually wins
If your priorities are selection and coin flexibility, BC.Game has no real rival in our index. The lobby advertises 10,000+ titles from about 100 providers, more than double the catalog of most competitors, with a full live-dealer floor. The BC Originals suite is provably fair with published mechanics, so the house games are player-verifiable rather than certificate-only — the same fairness architecture that earns Stake its top marks, reflected here in a fairness subscore of 9.0.
The coin support is the genuinely unique feature. 150+ cryptocurrencies means the long tail is covered: if you hold something beyond the usual BTC/ETH/USDT set, BC.Game is frequently the only major casino that takes it directly, no swap step required. A full sportsbook with esports markets and live betting rounds out the product.
The welcome package and its 40x string
BC.Game’s headline offer is enormous on paper: a four-deposit package of 180% / 240% / 300% / 360% matches, with tiers unlocking at $10 / $50 / $100 / $200 deposits, up to 100,000 BCD. The catch — and it is the whole story — is the currency: bonuses are paid in locked BCD, BC.Game’s house token, which converts to withdrawable balance only progressively as you wager. There is no classic “clear 40x and cash out” finish line; the value drips out at a rate tied to your betting volume and the house edge of what you play.
According to our July 2026 terms audit, that structure is why the bonusValue subscore sits at 7.2 despite the biggest headline percentages in our index: locked-token packages routinely deliver a small fraction of their advertised value to non-grinders. It is a different species of offer from the wager-free rakeback at Stake or Cloudbet — treat the percentages as a ceiling for high-volume play, not money you will bank.
Payouts and KYC
One clause worth knowing before you deposit big: the current terms (§8.6) cap withdrawals at €10,000 per month — €5,000 if your balance exceeds ten times your deposits. That cap is priced into the payout subscore (8.2) and matters more the bigger you play.
BC.Game runs the standard crypto-casino access model: email-only signup, no documents for crypto play at normal volumes, verification triggered by higher volumes, fiat rails, or compliance flags. That threshold policy keeps it in our no-KYC rankings. Crypto payouts are typically processed within minutes with no stated maximum, though large amounts can queue for manual review — which is why its payout subscore (8.8) sits below the fully automated tier in our instant-withdrawal rankings.
One flag worth stating plainly: BC.Game’s VPN policy is unclear in its terms. Combined with a restricted list that includes the United States, United Kingdom, Netherlands, France, and Spain, that ambiguity is a confiscation risk for anyone tempted to route around a block. Don’t.
Where BC.Game loses points
- The trust file. The disputed 2024 bankruptcy order and the retreat from Curaçao to Anjouan are the reasons this is an 8.5 and not a 9+. Player recourse under Anjouan is thinner, and the episode involved actual player claims, not a technicality.
- 40x wagering. The welcome package’s headline is among the biggest we track, but the playthrough is mid-to-high for the niche and the 30-day clock is real.
- Manual review on large withdrawals. Fast at normal volumes, slower exactly when the amounts matter most.
- Unclear VPN policy. Ambiguity in terms is never in the player’s favor.
Who should play here — and who shouldn’t
BC.Game fits the player who wants maximum surface area: the biggest library in our index, the widest coin support in the industry, provably fair originals, and a sportsbook, all behind an email-only signup. It especially fits holders of long-tail coins no other major brand accepts.
It is the wrong pick if counterparty trust is your first filter. A player choosing a home for a serious bankroll has cleaner options: Cloudbet has run since 2013 without an equivalent episode, and Stake pairs similar scale with a 9.4 trust score. BC.Game earns its 8.5 on product; whether the 2024 saga is disqualifying is a judgment we leave to you — our job was to make sure you knew about it.