Bookmaker Atlas · Cluster File

3 bookmakers in the Nesine cluster.

Nesine is a sportsbook operator group. The brands below are run under the same corporate parent (same ownership, often different licences and country availability).

Brands in cluster
3
Strong licences
0
Median trust
38/100
  • 0 at 80+
  • 0 at 60-79
  • 1 at 40-59
  • 2 under 40
Shared across all brands
Back-end, odds feed, settlement engine
Stays under each brand
Licence, dispute rights, withdrawal policy
Read the cluster brief
Automated trust score. This rating is computed from public license, KYC, payment, and reputation data. It is not a manual human review. See methodology.

What the data says about the Nesine cluster

Where the cluster lands

Median trust score in this cluster: 38/100. That is 2 points below the Atlas-wide median of 40/100. Within the Operator group category, this cluster's median sits at position 49 of 138 (sorted lowest to highest).

Across 3 scored brands: 1 at 40-59, 2 under 40.

Where brands operate

Brands in this cluster accept players from 1 country in total. The biggest concentrations are Turkey (2 brands).

Most common red flags

Atlas has not aggregated specific red-flag patterns for this cluster yet.

Find your bookmaker

All 3 brands running on Nesine. Search by name or filter by licence tier. The dot beside each brand shows what tier its operator's licence holds.

Showing 3 of 3

If you have an account at a Nesine brand

Brands in the Nesine cluster typically share an operator, an odds engine, or both. Operator-level decisions (payout policy, account limits, dispute handling) tend to repeat across siblings.

  1. Step 1

    Check the operator-level enforcement history

    Fines or licence actions against one brand in an operator group usually signal the same behaviour at the siblings. Atlas tracks these on the brand-level audit.

  2. Step 2

    Compare licence jurisdictions side by side

    Operators often run different brands under different licences. The licence determines your dispute rights, not the brand name on the storefront.

  3. Step 3

    Verify country-availability before depositing

    Operators sometimes restrict brands by region for licensing reasons. Confirm your country is on the active list, not just the marketing page.

  4. Step 4

    Watch for shared bonus T&Cs

    Bonus wagering and abuse-clause language is often shared across sibling brands. If one brand has a reputation for confiscating wins, the others likely use the same playbook.

Frequently asked: bookmaker clusters

Are any brands in the Nesine cluster strongly regulated?

Of the 3 brands Atlas tracks in this cluster, 3 hold no documented Tier 1, 2, or 3 licence in the public registries Atlas reads. Brand-level licence is the single biggest variable that determines your dispute rights, segregated-funds protection, and complaint channel; a cluster without strict regulator representation is a structural signal worth weighing before depositing.

How many countries do brands in the Nesine cluster operate in?

The 3 brands in the Nesine cluster collectively accept players from 1 country. Atlas tracks the footprint per-brand from public terms of service and active payment-rail coverage; aggregating across the cluster gives a rough sense of which regions the cluster's operators target.

Why does Atlas group these 3 brands together?

They share an operator, an odds engine, a platform, or all three. Atlas tracks the affiliation so a player can see when "different" brands are run by the same back-end. The grouping comes from public regulator filings, corporate ownership disclosures, and infrastructure fingerprinting, not from guesswork.

Does sharing infrastructure mean shared problems?

Often yes. A withdrawal delay, an independent web-security flag, or a regulator action against one brand in the cluster is usually a sign of the same on the rest. Atlas score components that track infrastructure (security, threat intelligence) tend to move together for sibling brands.

Why pick one brand over another in the same cluster?

License jurisdiction is the single biggest reason. A brand licensed in the UK or Malta gives a player binding dispute-resolution rights that the same operator running under a Caribbean license does not. Brand-specific support staffing and country availability also matter.

Are payments and withdrawals tied to the operator or the brand?

Tied to the operator in most clusters. If the operator has a payout-delay history, the player will see it regardless of which brand label they signed up under. Atlas surfaces the operator-level evidence on every clone page.

How does the Atlas score handle sibling brands?

Each brand scores independently, but the evidence trail often overlaps. If a regulator fines the operator, every sibling brand under that operator picks up the fine in the threat-intelligence component. The license component scores per-brand because licenses are issued per-brand.

Trust score computed from 6 weighted components (licensing, corporate, security, reviews, threat intel, operational). License data verified against public authority records. Last verified 53 days ago.

See full Trust Score v2 methodology | about the data

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