FinTelegram’s Rail Atlas reviews of Stellar-linked offshore casinos show a repeatable payments pattern: players are routed through “open banking” and wallet rails that do not pay the casino directly, but instead pay VASP-registered intermediaries—notably DAXCHAIN (Estonia) and ChainValley (Poland)—that appear to function as fiat collection points. This is not an edge case. It looks like a scalable operating model designed to keep the casino out of the payment line-of-fire.
Read our ChainValley reports here.
Our latest casino reviews (WinBay, AllySpin, LuckyMax, Spinbara, Supabet) reinforce what the Legiano/Stellar investigations already suggested: offshore casino groups are industrializing “deposit rails” the same way they industrialize domain churn.
The striking part is not just that open-banking is offered—it’s who receives the money. Instead of paying a clearly identified, licensed gambling operator, the flows terminate at intermediaries like DAXCHAIN (Estonia) and ChainValley (Poland). From a compliance perspective, that is a flashing red light: the “merchant of record” layer is being engineered so the casino is one step removed from the payment event.
Under PSD2 (Directive (EU) 2015/2366), payment services in the EU are a regulated activity, and authorization/registration is tracked through national competent authorities and consolidated in EU-level registers.
If an entity is functionally acting as a fiat collection agent (receiving consumer bank transfers that fund an offshore casino relationship), the natural questions are:
This is exactly where “fake-fiat” architecture becomes useful to operators: if the payment can be framed internally as a purchase of crypto (even if the user experience suggests a casino deposit), the intermediary tries to step out of the PSD2 payment-agent box and into the VASP box.
Public sources indicate DAXCHAIN holds an Estonian FIU virtual currency service authorization (listed with license number FVT000045 in FIU communications).
Separately, Estonia’s business register discloses the company’s ownership/control information (including the beneficial owner name in the register view).
None of that, on its face, answers the PSD2 question: why is a VASP the named recipient in a bank-transfer “deposit” flow that ultimately funds offshore gambling activity? If the true commercial purpose is gambling, routing fiat into a VASP payee looks less like innovation and more like perimeter-hopping.
Poland’s virtual-currency activity register lists ChainValley, but Polish authorities have been explicit that entry in the VASP activity register is not equivalent to a financial services license/supervisory approval in the PSD2 sense.
FinTelegram’s Legiano/Stellar reporting already documented how these flows can be structured: “deposit” → embedded crypto purchase (USDC/USDC.e) → automatic transfer to casino wallet, funded via Skrill/Neteller rails—leaving consumers with weaker dispute/chargeback leverage because they technically “received the crypto they ordered.”
In our new Stellar set, ChainValley appears again—paired with classic consumer payment brands (Skrill/Neteller/PaysafeCard) that were never built to be silent feeders into offshore casino stablecoin transfers.
Read our Stellar reports here.
We found a cascade that includes Tink in the open-banking confirmation path. Visa publicly confirmed its acquisition of Tink and positions it as a payments/data platform for initiating payments and moving money via APIs.
This creates an uncomfortable but necessary compliance question for the ecosystem:
If you have internal documentation, merchant onboarding records, payee/descriptor data, settlement account details, wallet clusters, or evidence showing how DAXCHAIN and ChainValley categorize these “deposits” (casino funding vs. crypto purchase), share it securely via Whistle42. We are particularly interested in: (i) merchant-of-record identities; (ii) transaction narratives used for bank compliance; (iii) chargeback/complaints outcomes; (iv) the gateway switching logic between payment-gateway endpoints; and (v) any correspondence with regulators.


