Curaçao Regulator Confirms BC.Game and Rabidi Still Listed as Revoked

 

WILLEMSTAD – Confusion surrounding the status of BC.Game’s parent company, Small House B.V., and online casino group Rabidi N.V. appears to have been resolved after the Curaçao Gaming Authority (CGA) confirmed that both operators remain on its Enforcement Register with licences marked revoked.

Speculation spread last week when the two companies briefly disappeared from the regulator’s publicly available list of cancelled licences. Several industry outlets suggested the move might signal preparations for a comeback, particularly in Europe.

However, the most recent Enforcement Register, updated on 13 September, clearly shows both companies still flagged as revoked. The same update added three new entries — BetByte Innovations BV, QG Bet BV, and Green Run BV — but also contained anomalies. The numbering of the document skipped, and its introductory paragraph was missing from the file uploaded on 12 September, raising questions about whether the absence of BC.Game and Rabidi N.V. was an administrative error.

The CGA does not provide access to earlier versions of the register, making it difficult to verify exactly what occurred during last week’s update.

Industry observers remain cautious. BC.Game, a crypto-focused operator, lost its licence in late 2024 following bankruptcy proceedings that left more than $2.5 million in unresolved player claims. The scandal gained international attention because of the company’s high-profile sponsorship of Premier League club Leicester City.

For now, both BC.Game and Rabidi N.V. remain barred from the Curaçao market, with no indication from the regulator of any change in status. 




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