The Headline Number, Tested
Bet25 advertises a catalogue of 2,056+ games. That figure comes from the operator's own lobby, so the first question a careful player should ask is: how much of it can be checked without an account?
Here is the answer, measured rather than assumed. The publicly browsable catalogue — what anyone can inspect before connecting a wallet — lists 277 individually named titles spread across more than eight studios. Everything beyond that sits behind sign-in. We say exactly that, because it is exactly what the evidence supports: the four-digit figure is plausible for a platform carrying Evolution and Pragmatic Play inventory, but it is not independently countable from the outside. If the headline number matters to your decision, the honest framing is that roughly 86% of it cannot be inspected until you register.
What the visible 277 do establish is quality and recency, which the audit below works through shelf by shelf. As for the First Bet Bonus — none of its terms are public; verify in the Bonus T&C at registration. 18+ only.
18+ | Gamble Responsibly | T&Cs Apply.
Category Coverage: The Audit Table
The 277 visible listings break down as follows. These are counts of catalogue entries, not a claim about totals behind the login wall.
| Shelf (pre-login catalogue) | Listings |
|---|---|
| Slots | 70 |
| Crash | 35 |
| Bonus-buy | 29 |
| RNG table games | 2 |
| Live baccarat | 34 |
| Live blackjack | 30 |
| Live roulette | 26 |
| Live game shows | 17 |
| Mixed live-lobby entries | 34 |
| Total visible | 277 |
Two findings jump out. First, the live-dealer side dominates the public layer: 141 of the 277 listings are live products, which tells you where the platform's content spend is concentrated — examined separately in the live floor examination. Second, the deep slots inventory that would substantiate a four-digit catalogue is precisely the part you cannot inspect pre-login. The 70 visible slots are a shop window, not a warehouse manifest.
A third, smaller finding: only two RNG table listings — Craps and Fan Tan, both from Evolution — appear publicly. Players who want pre-verified RNG blackjack or roulette variety will not find it in the shop window, whatever may exist inside.
Provider Certification: The Actual Integrity Layer
Here is the distinction this entire site keeps drawing: an offshore operator licence tells you little about whether the reels are fair. Studio certification does. Game builds from regulated suppliers are tested and certified under those suppliers' own regimes, wherever the game ends up hosted. The operator of record — Horns and Hooves Company Sociedad Anonima, Costa Rican registry 3-101-922698, holding Anjouan licence ALSI-202505001-FI1, an offshore authorisation we describe plainly wherever it comes up — controls your account, bonuses and withdrawals; it does not manufacture the games.
On the visible 277, the studio labels check out and comfortably clear the "8+" the site advertises: Pragmatic Play and Evolution carry most of the weight, with BGaming, Amusnet, Hacksaw Gaming, Play'n GO, PG Soft, TurboGames, Iconic21, Gamzix and a tail of smaller labels filling the shelves.
The caveat a sceptic must attach: certification covers the game software, not the operator's conduct at the cashier. A certified slot and a slow withdrawal queue can coexist. Treat them as separate trust decisions, because they are.
Slots Spot-Check: The Names Check Out
A catalogue can be padded with filler. This one's visible layer is not. The slots shelf carries current-generation flagships: Sweet Bonanza 1000, Gates of Olympus 1000, Sugar Rush 1000 and Zeus vs Hades – Gods of War 250 from Pragmatic Play; Le Bunny from Hacksaw Gaming; Golden Avalon Hold And Win from BGaming; Shining Crown from Amusnet; Moon Princess 100 and Rise of Dead from Play'n GO.
The bonus-buy shelf is equally legitimate: The Dog House Megaways (Pragmatic Play), Mahjong Ways 2 and Lucky Neko (PG Soft), plus Dead or Alive 2, Buffalo Mania Megaways and Book of Ra Deluxe Buy Bonus among its 29 entries. Crash players get a 35-strong shelf including Aviamasters and its sequel from BGaming, Speed Crash from Hacksaw Gaming, Chicken Road from Inout, and Redjet and Pilot from Gamzix.
What we deliberately do not print: RTP figures. Bet25 does not publish per-title RTP on its public pages, and configurable-RTP builds mean third-party numbers may not match this deployment. Check the in-game information panel after sign-in — the only RTP that counts is the one in the build you are actually playing.
What Stays Behind the Login Wall
For the record, the un-inspectable remainder includes: the full studio roster beyond the visible labels, the true depth of the Megaways, jackpot and hold-and-win shelves, live jackpot values, and any regional catalogue differences. None of this is a scandal — gated lobbies are standard practice across crypto casinos — but a standard practice is still an asymmetry: the operator asks for a wallet connection before showing the full inventory it advertises.
If that gap bothers you, the instinct is sound, and there is a cheap remedy: connecting a wallet does not itself move funds, so the full catalogue can be audited before any deposit. The registration walkthrough covers what a wallet connection does and does not commit you to. The 18+ requirement applies at registration, not merely at play.
The Sceptic's Read on the Library
Verdict: the visible layer earns a pass — genuine flagship titles, a credible studio spread, sensible category architecture. The headline 2,056+ remains a claim you can only audit from inside, and the public-versus-gated asymmetry is worth understanding before you connect anything.
Cons, stated as ever: an offshore operator licence with limited recourse; no public RTP disclosure; the deep catalogue unverifiable pre-login; and bonus terms — should you take one — readable only in the Bonus T&C at registration.
Next steps for the methodical: the live-dealer examination, the payment rails file, or the FAQ for pre-registration questions. 18+ only.
18+ | Gamble Responsibly | T&Cs Apply.