Dracula Casino Review
Reviewed & updated July 2026 by the Dracula Guide team. 18+. Play responsibly.
Dracula is a gothic-themed online casino advertising more than 4,000 games across 45-plus providers, a crypto-friendly cashier and a welcome package. Its main domain, dracula.casino, blocks automated review tools behind a Cloudflare challenge, so we built this review from a live Dracula-branded mirror (dracula-gb.uk) plus independent third-party coverage of the brand. Two findings dominate everything else. First: Dracula's own mirror network cites two different Curaçao licence numbers for what is supposed to be the same operator — '365/JAZ', from a master-licence framework that stopped existing on 18 August 2024, and 'OGL/2021/9113/810', a newer-format number dated to 2021, before that numbering system existed in its current form. A brand disagreeing with itself about its own licence is a genuine red flag, independent of which number, if either, is real. Second: the '777% up to £7,777 over five deposits' bonus advertised in marketing does not match the '100% up to £450 + 160 free spins' offer detailed with actual terms on the live site — the numbers simply don't reconcile. Casino Guru's current Safety Index of 5.0/10 ('Below average') tracks with this picture: one relevant complaint logged, no outright blacklisting, and terms and conditions it calls 'mostly fair' despite flagging some questionable clauses. None of this proves Dracula won't pay out — but a licensing story this inconsistent, paired with bonus marketing that doesn't match the small print, means you should verify everything yourself before depositing.
Pros
- Large advertised library — 4,000+ games across 45+ providers (representative mix: Pragmatic Play, Play'n GO, Evolution, NetEnt, Hacksaw Gaming)
- Crypto withdrawals reported to clear in about an hour
- E-wallet withdrawals processed the same day
- Separate 11% cashback promotion with no wagering requirement
- Casino Guru finds no blacklisting and calls the T&C 'mostly fair' overall
Cons
- Two Dracula-branded domains quote two different Curaçao licence numbers for the same operator
- The '365/JAZ' format expired on 18 August 2024 and no longer exists as a valid framework
- 'OGL/2021/9113/810' is dated before the OGL numbering system existed in its current form
- Casino Guru Safety Index only 5.0/10 'Below average', with 1 relevant complaint logged
- Marketing's '777% up to £7,777' bonus bears no resemblance to the actual on-site offer
- Card withdrawals can take up to 5 business days
Licence & operator
Dracula is marketed under the name Softon Ltd (Cyprus), a name that appears across the brand's mirror network but is self-declared and not independently confirmed in any public regulator register we could locate. The licensing picture is genuinely inconsistent: one independent review of the brand cites the old Gaming Curaçao master-licence number '365/JAZ' — but that entire licensing framework stopped issuing and recognising sub-licences as of 18 August 2024, replaced by the newer Curaçao Gaming Control Board (GCB) system, so a licence in that format cannot currently be valid. A separate live Dracula-branded mirror, dracula-gb.uk, instead quotes 'OGL/2021/9113/810' — a number that follows the newer Curaçao GCB 'OGL' format, except it is dated 2021, years before that OGL system existed in its current form. Two official-looking Dracula domains disagreeing with each other about their own licence number is a red flag in itself, regardless of which, if either, number turns out to be genuine. On the safety-tracking side, Casino Guru currently rates Dracula 5.0/10, 'Below average', citing one relevant complaint (worth 403 black points in their scoring) and no outright blacklisting; Casino Guru's own assessment describes the terms and conditions as 'mostly fair' despite flagging some questionable clauses within them.
Payments & withdrawals
Dracula's cashier is built around cryptocurrency — Bitcoin, Ethereum and other coins are accepted, with withdrawals reported to clear in around an hour, among the faster payout claims in the market if accurate. E-wallets (Skrill, Neteller) are described as same-day. Traditional bank cards (Visa, Mastercard) and bank transfer are also accepted, but those withdrawals can take up to 5 business days — a wide spread across the three payment rails. Everything runs in £ (GBP), matching the British sourcing of the mirror we reviewed. As with any casino whose own licensing claims don't hold together cleanly, budget time for identity verification before your first withdrawal, and don't assume the fastest advertised timeline applies to every payment method.
Back to the full Dracula casino review.
FAQ
Who owns and licenses Dracula?
Dracula is marketed under the name Softon Ltd (Cyprus) across its mirror network — a self-declared name we could not independently confirm in any public regulator register. Its licence claims are inconsistent between sources: '365/JAZ' (an expired Curaçao framework) versus 'OGL/2021/9113/810' (a newer format dated implausibly early).
Is Dracula a scam?
We found no proof it's an outright scam — Casino Guru logs only one relevant complaint and no blacklisting. But a brand whose own mirror network can't agree on its licence number, paired with wildly mismatched bonus marketing, has already given players real reasons for caution.
Why does dracula.casino block this review?
The main domain, dracula.casino, returns a Cloudflare bot-detection challenge to automated review tools. We built this review from a live Dracula-branded mirror (dracula-gb.uk) and independent third-party sources instead.
18+. Dracula is for adults only. Gambling can be addictive — play responsibly. BeGambleAware.org.