Licensing And Regulation At Slot Bunny
Slot Bunny states it operates under an online gambling licence issued in Curaçao (historically under the Curaçao eGaming framework). That type of licence generally allows the casino to offer slots and table games internationally, but player protection rules are lighter than in UKGC or MGA regimes.
The licence framework regulates who can legally offer gambling services, what game content can be hosted, and whether the operator must keep basic corporate and compliance records. For a player, it mainly means the casino has a named licensing jurisdiction to point to if a dispute escalates beyond customer support.
Game regulation focuses on the integrity of outcomes through certified random number generators (RNGs) at the game level. In practice, the player experience is that spins and hands are generated by software RNGs rather than manually controlled results, and game providers risk losing distribution if their titles fail testing.
Responsible gambling controls are typically set at the operator level: age gating, self-exclusion, and deposit limits depend on what Slot Bunny implements in its account tools. For the player, this determines whether you can block your own access, cap spend, and see activity history without contacting support.
Anti-money laundering and identity checks are enforced through KYC: document collection, payment method verification, and source-of-funds requests when thresholds or risk flags trigger. For the player, this means withdrawals can pause until verification completes, and the casino can refuse a payout if identity or payment ownership does not match.
Payments are regulated through the casino’s banking and PSP relationships rather than through a single universal rulebook. For the player, it affects which deposit methods appear, how chargebacks are handled, and whether a withdrawal can be sent back only to the original funding method.
Bonus and fairness rules mostly come from the casino’s published terms: wagering requirements, maximum cashout