mFortune Sister Sites: What Happened to the In Touch Games Network

mFortune logo, a former In Touch Games casino

mFortune’s sister sites were the other In Touch Games brands: PocketWin, Dr Slot, Mr Spin, Cashmo, Jammy Monkey, Luck.com, Mad Slots and Slot Factory, all run on the same UK licence and the same in-house games. They have all now closed. In Touch Games surrendered its UK Gambling Commission licence in September 2023, and mFortune itself stopped taking players in November 2024, so this page explains who ran the network, what happened to it, and which currently licensed casinos make sense instead. mFortune was operated by Viral Interactive under UK Gambling Commission account 2091.

The In Touch Games Network in Full

A quick note on terms. mFortune never really marketed a list of “official” partner casinos. In UK search, “sister sites” means brands run by the same operator on the same licence, and that is how we use it here: the casinos that sat under In Touch Games alongside mFortune. Every one of them shared the same parent, the same in-house games studio and the same regulatory fate.

The Network at a Glance

  • Closest in feel: PocketWin, the mobile-first sibling with the same in-house slots.
  • Bingo-led sibling: Cashmo and the wider In Touch bingo network.
  • Slots-only sibling: Dr Slot and Mr Spin.
  • Newest brands: Jammy Monkey, Mad Slots and Luck.com, launched late in the group’s life.
  • The games studio: Slot Factory, which built every title the brands used.
  • Status today: all closed. None can be joined, and none hold a UK licence.

The In Touch Games Brands Compared

Sister site Status UK licence Known for How it related to mFortune
PocketWin Closed (Nov 2024) Surrendered Mobile-first slots and bingo Same operator and games studio, launched 2010
Dr Slot Closed (2024) Surrendered Slots, no-deposit spins Same operator, launched 2018
Mr Spin Closed (2024) Surrendered Mobile-only slots Same operator, launched around 2016
Cashmo Closed (2024) Surrendered Mobile bingo and slots Same operator, launched 2019
Jammy Monkey Closed (Nov 2024) Surrendered Quirky slots and bingo Same operator, launched 2021
Luck.com Closed (Nov 2024) Surrendered Larger third-party slots library Same operator, a later, broader brand
Mad Slots Closed (Nov 2024) Surrendered 900+ third-party slots Same operator, a later brand
Slot Factory Closed (2024) Surrendered The in-house games studio Built every game the network ran

The Brands, One by One

PocketWin

PocketWin casino logo

Run by In Touch Games and launched in 2010, PocketWin was the closest thing to a twin: the same in-house slots, the same pay-by-phone-bill banking and the same mobile-first design. It offered a small no-deposit bonus and a 200% first-deposit match in its day. It closed alongside mFortune in November 2024. Versus mFortune, it leaned even harder into mobile and carried a slightly smaller library.

Dr Slot

Dr Slot casino logo

Dr Slot arrived in 2018 as the group’s slots specialist, with a doctor mascot and a steady stream of no-deposit spins. Like the rest, every game came from the In Touch studio, so the catalogue was modest. It won a WhichBingo award for best new slots site in 2019. Versus mFortune, it dropped bingo and table games to focus purely on slots.

Mr Spin

Mr Spin casino logo

Mr Spin, launched around 2016, was the mobile-only sibling. It ran a familiar welcome bonus up to about £100 and the same handful of exclusive slots and roulette. Versus mFortune, it was lighter and simpler, aimed squarely at phone players who wanted a quick spin rather than a full lobby.

Cashmo

Cashmo casino logo

Cashmo, from 2019, was the network’s mobile bingo and slots brand, known for weekly bonuses and a rewards system. It shared the In Touch bingo network with its siblings. Versus mFortune, it put bingo and cash rewards front and centre rather than the loyalty shop.

Jammy Monkey

Jammy Monkey casino logo

Jammy Monkey launched in 2021 with a cheeky monkey theme and a welcome package across the first couple of deposits. It was one of the last brands In Touch built. Versus mFortune, it had a fresher look but the same underlying games and the same eventual closure note in November 2024.

Luck.com

Luck.com casino logo

Luck.com was a departure: instead of in-house titles it stocked over 1,800 third-party slots from studios like Play’n GO and Pragmatic Play, plus live dealer tables. It launched in 2021. Versus mFortune, it had a far bigger library, but it shut on the same November 2024 timetable as the rest.

Mad Slots

Mad Slots casino logo

Mad Slots offered around 900 third-party slots, Megaways and Drops & Wins titles, a clear sign In Touch was moving away from purely in-house games near the end. Versus mFortune, it was slots-heavy and provider-led, and it closed in November 2024 with its siblings.

Slot Factory

Slot Factory games studio logo

Slot Factory was the in-house studio behind the whole group. Almost every exclusive title the brands ran, from Vegas Vegas to Sherlock, came from here. When the licence was surrendered the studio’s brands went with it, which is why those games disappeared from the market entirely rather than moving to another casino.

The Complete In Touch Games Sister Sites List

In Touch Games ran its own brands rather than hosting third-party “white-label” skins, which is unusual. On the UK Gambling Commission register the operating entity was In Touch Games Limited of Halesowen, and its sites were:

Owned brands: mFortune, PocketWin, Dr Slot, Mr Spin, Cashmo, Jammy Monkey, Luck.com, Mad Slots, Casino2020 and Bonus Boss, plus the Slot Factory games studio.

White-label casinos: none. The group built and ran everything itself, which is part of why the closure wiped out a whole catalogue of games at once.

Official regional brands: none beyond a desktop version of mFortune. Any affiliate list that still shows these as live is out of date; the licence was surrendered, so the right source of truth is the UK Gambling Commission register, which now shows no active In Touch Games licence.

What Was the Same and What Was Different

Feature mFortune The sister sites
Operator In Touch Games Ltd In Touch Games Ltd (same)
UK licence Surrendered Sep 2023 Surrendered Sep 2023 (same)
Games In-house Slot Factory titles In-house, except Luck.com and Mad Slots (third-party)
Bingo Yes Cashmo and PocketWin yes, Dr Slot and Mr Spin no
GamStop Was covered while licensed Was covered while licensed (same)
Status now Closed Closed (all)

Were These Official Sister Sites?

Yes, in the meaningful sense: they were truly the same operator, not lookalikes. People sometimes confuse three groups. There were the true same-operator brands (the In Touch list above). There were unrelated casinos that simply offered similar pay-by-phone play. And there are clone sites today using the mFortune name to push sign-ups elsewhere, which are not the real brand and hold no connection to it. Treat any site claiming mFortune is “fully licensed and accepting players” with caution, because the licence was surrendered in 2023.

How the Casino Worked, and Where It Stands Now

mFortune launched in 2007 and was, for years, one of the better-known British mobile casinos. It built its name on exclusive in-house slots, a pay-by-phone-bill option and a loyalty shop that swapped points for real prizes. The catch was always the size of the library, because everything was made in-house, so you traded variety for games you could not find anywhere else. The bigger story now is regulatory, so we will be straight about it.

Games and Bonuses

At its peak the casino carried roughly 400 in-house slots, a small set of bingo rooms and basic blackjack and roulette, with no live casino. New players got a no-deposit starter followed by a first-deposit match. Those offers no longer exist, and any current advert claiming an mFortune welcome bonus is not the genuine brand.

Payments and Support

While live, mFortune took Visa, Mastercard, PayPal, Apple Pay, Paysafecard and pay by phone bill, with withdrawals quoted at one to five working days and PayPal the quickest. Support ran on live chat, email and phone. Player funds were held in segregated accounts under UK Gambling Commission rules.

Responsible Gambling and the Closure

While it held a licence, mFortune was covered by GamStop and the usual UK tools (deposit limits, time-outs, self-exclusion). That cover ended with the licence. The operator, In Touch Games, was fined £2.2m in 2019, £3.4m in 2021 and £6.1m in January 2023 for anti-money-laundering and social-responsibility failings. The Commission suspended its licence on 4 September 2023, and In Touch surrendered it the next day. Players were given until 6 March 2024 to withdraw balances, and the consumer sites closed for good on 21 November 2024. If you still believe you are owed funds, the route is the operator’s registered contact, not the Commission, which does not handle individual balances. For support with gambling itself, GamCare, BeGambleAware and GamStop remain free to use.

Mobile

mFortune was mobile-first from the start, with a downloadable app and a browser site that ran on almost any phone. That was its strongest point, and it is the feature worth matching if you are looking for a replacement.

Key Facts

Operator In Touch Games Ltd (Halesowen)
Parent group Skywind Group (acquired 2022)
Platform In-house, with the Slot Factory games studio
Licence UKGC remote casino and bingo, surrendered 5 September 2023
Established 2007
Status Closed to players since 21 November 2024
UK protection Was GamStop-covered while licensed; no cover now (closed)
Sister sites PocketWin, Dr Slot, Mr Spin, Cashmo, Jammy Monkey, Luck.com, Mad Slots, Casino2020, Bonus Boss (all closed)
Account currency GBP
Licence checked Checked on the UKGC register, June 2026 (no active In Touch Games licence)
Our rating 2/10

Operator details last reviewed: June 2026 (last updated 8 June 2026)

Updated June: rewrote the page around the licence surrender and the network closure, and removed the outdated live-casino offers.

Pros and Cons

Pros (looking back):

  • Original, in-house slots, such as Vegas Vegas and the Sherlock titles, that you could not get anywhere else.
  • A real no-deposit starter and a long-running loyalty shop that paid out physical rewards, which players rated well.
  • Pay by phone bill and PayPal both supported, handy for mobile-first players.
  • Held a UK Gambling Commission licence throughout its operating life, with segregated player funds.

Cons (the reason it is here):

  • The operator was fined three times by the Commission (£2.2m, £3.4m and £6.1m) for AML and safer-gambling failings.
  • The licence was suspended on 4 September 2023 and surrendered the next day; the casino is now permanently closed.
  • The in-house-only model meant a small library and no live casino.
  • Slow withdrawals on some methods were a recurring complaint in player reviews.
  • Clone sites now trade on the mFortune name, which is a trust risk for anyone searching for it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who owned mFortune?

mFortune was operated by In Touch Games Ltd of Halesowen, which the Skywind Group acquired in 2022.

Does mFortune still operate?

No. In Touch Games surrendered its UK Gambling Commission licence on 5 September 2023 and the mFortune site closed to players on 21 November 2024.

What were mFortune’s sister sites?

They were the other In Touch Games brands: PocketWin, Dr Slot, Mr Spin, Cashmo, Jammy Monkey, Luck.com, Mad Slots, Casino2020 and Bonus Boss. All of them have closed.

Why did mFortune close?

After repeated UK Gambling Commission penalties for anti-money-laundering and social-responsibility failings, the Commission suspended In Touch Games’ licence in September 2023 and the operator then surrendered it, winding the brands down.

Were mFortune sister sites on GamStop?

Yes, while they were licensed they were all covered by GamStop self-exclusion like any UK casino. That cover ended when the licence was surrendered, because the sites no longer operate.

Can I still withdraw money from mFortune?

The official withdrawal window ran until 6 March 2024. If you believe you still hold a balance, contact the operator through its registered details rather than the Gambling Commission, which does not handle individual player funds.

Is a site claiming mFortune is licensed genuine?

Be careful. The real mFortune licence was surrendered in 2023, so any site advertising mFortune as a live, licensed casino with a welcome bonus is not the genuine brand.

Are there casinos like mFortune still running?

Yes. For a mobile-first UK casino with pay-by-phone options you can look at currently UK Gambling Commission licensed brands, including those featured at the top of this page. Always check the licence on the Commission register before depositing.

Our Verdict on mFortune

If you came here to sign up at mFortune, the honest answer is that you cannot, and that is the whole point of this update. The mFortune sister sites were all part of the In Touch Games network, and the network is gone. What it did well, exclusive mobile slots and pay by phone, is worth matching at a casino that actually holds a current UK licence, so treat the brands featured above as the live, regulated starting point rather than chasing a closed name. As a working casino today, mFortune scores a 2, purely because there is nothing left to join.

New Sister Site rating: 2/10