The licence in one sentence
Shuffle.com operates under licence number OGL/2024/1337/0628, issued by the Curaçao Gaming Control Board (GCB) to Natural Nine B.V., a Curaçao-registered company. The licence is current and verifiable on the Curaçao GCB public register.
What changed in 2024
Until 2024, Curaçao operated a sub-licence system. Master licence holders issued sub-licences to operators. Oversight was thin. The reputation suffered.
From 2024, Curaçao moved to a direct licence system under the Landsverordening op de Kansspelen (LOK). Each operator now holds its own licence directly from the GCB. Compliance requirements tightened. Player protection rules became enforceable.
Shuffle's OGL/2024/1337/0628 is a post-reform direct licence. It is the strongest licence Curaçao currently issues. It is not the same thing as the looser sub-licences of the pre-2024 era.
What the licence requires of Shuffle
- Segregation of player funds from operational funds
- Random Number Generator certification by an approved third party
- Responsible gambling tools including limits, self-exclusion, and reality checks
- Anti-money laundering procedures including KYC at withdrawal
- Dispute resolution through the GCB's official channels
- Public disclosure of game odds and house edge where applicable
- Annual audit of financial and gaming systems
What Curaçao does NOT cover
Curaçao is not the UKGC. The licence does not include the same level of marketing restrictions, problem gambling intervention thresholds, or VIP scheme regulation as Tier-1 European jurisdictions.
It also does not give you direct recourse to a national gambling ombudsman in your home country. If you are in the UK, MGA-licensed sites give you more local consumer protection. If you are in the US, you should not be using Shuffle at all (their US sister site is Shuffle.us, separate licence).
What Curaçao does give you is a regulator that can revoke the licence if Shuffle behaves badly. That is the meaningful pressure point. In a market where many crypto casinos operate with no licence at all, having any working regulator counts for something.
How to verify the licence yourself
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1
Visit gamingcontrolboard.cw
Open the official Curaçao GCB website. Look for the 'Licensees' or 'Register' section in the main navigation.
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2
Search OGL/2024/1337/0628
Use the licence search tool. Enter the full licence number including the OGL prefix.
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3
Confirm operator name
The result should show Natural Nine B.V. as the licensee. Status should be 'Active'.
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4
Check disclosed domains
The licence record lists the domains authorised under the licence. shuffle.com should be present. shuffle.us is licensed separately and will not appear.
What this means for you
If you are in a country where Curaçao-licensed crypto casinos are accessible (most of Europe, LatAm, parts of Asia, Australia, Canada), Shuffle's licence is a working safeguard. Disputes can be escalated. The site cannot disappear with your funds without regulatory consequences.
If you are in a country with a local Tier-1 licensed market (UK, Malta, Italy, Spain, Germany, Sweden), Shuffle is not licensed locally and you will use it at your own discretion. Many players do, knowingly, because the bonus and library are better than what local licences allow.
Questions readers actually ask
Is OGL/2024/1337/0628 a real licence number?
Yes. You can verify it on the Curaçao Gaming Control Board's public register at gamingcontrolboard.cw. The licensee on file is Natural Nine B.V., the operator of Shuffle.com.
Is Curaçao a 'real' licence?
Yes, particularly post-2024. It is not as strict as UKGC or MGA. It is stricter than no licence at all, which is the alternative for many crypto casino players.
Can I complain to the regulator?
Yes. If Shuffle's internal dispute process fails, you can escalate to the Curaçao GCB directly. Details are on their website. In practice, most player disputes are resolved through Shuffle's support before that stage.