LuckyMate sister sites include Winomania, 7Bet, BetFusion, BetCrown and PlayWins, all operating under the Anakatech Interactive Limited licence (UKGC: 48789). There are also sister sites that share the same sportsbook technology, provided by Alternar.
LuckyMate is owned and operated by Anakatech Interactive Limited (UKGC: 48789).
Whilst LuckyMate only entered the market in 2025, Anakatech have been around a little long. Its oldest licence dates back to November 2017, with further licence elements added at two points throughout 2024.
LuckyMate is not the only brand under its stewardship either, with eight domains on its licence. With all of those factors feeding into a blend of a modern but experienced player in the market, there is high hopes for LuckyMate and the LuckyMate sister sites.

LuckyMate is a tidy looking platform, using gold trim on a green background for what is a fairly premium feel on first glance. That is in part down to smart design of icons and buttons, which drive navigation around the site and within the sports and casino sections.
Scratch a fraction deeper into the design, though, and it is far from perfect. There are design inconsistencies between the sports and casino pages, whilst the path you manoeuvre down isn't always the most intuitive; selecting a continent before a specific sport in the sportsbook, for example, is an odd decision tree logic.
You cannot complain about the quality of what is on offer, though. There are circa 40 sports covered in the sportsbook, with event coverage running around the globe. Market depths are alright too, boasting around 200 markets on a top-level football match, and the margins aren't bad either at 5.93%.
Over in the casino, you'll find a number of the top software companies providing games, including titles from the likes of Pragmatic Play, PlayTech and Evolution. There are in excess of 1,800 games in total.
Luckymate delivers a mixed offering, in truth. Some aspects of the site are really strong, whilst others leave room for improvement. Will any of these LuckyMate sister sites stand up a stronger platform?
Structurally, BetNero shares clear traits with its sister site, LuckyMate. Stylistically, it's nowhere near the standard. It opts for cheap-looking icons, as opposed to clean design choices.
That said, the buttons and menu options are still clearly displayed and spaced in a manner that are easy to interact with.
As for what you get in the main body of the site, it's a close replication of LuckyMate. In the sportsbook, there is a good range of sports available, with solid but unspectacular market depths.
The most notable difference comes in the betting margin; our tests put BetNero at 7.19%. That's not atrocious, but is a fair bit above some of the other LuckyMate sister sites.
The casino, meanwhile, sees over 1,000 games to dabble on. They're provided by well-known brands, with a good spread of game types available too.
All that noted, it is a LuckyMate sister site that sits firmly in the "average" bucket on all fronts and, for our money, is probably the poor relation.
We'd probably stop short of saying 7bet is instantly identifiable as a LuckyMate sister site, but put the two alongside one another and the similarities are there for all to see.
Both share the main navigation hub, which is a footer bar that aids navigation from one area of the site to another, but the structure within each section is then subtly different.
In the casino, the scroll bar that allows users to navigate into different game sub-categories is displayed in a different style, whilst the search bar also presents a more stripped back manner.
Functionality, however, is the same, and there are not wild variances in game quality or depth; 7bet boasts around 300 extra game titles.
The story across in the sportsbook isn't wildly different to that. The detailed elements of the sportsbook are comparable, with 35 sports available to wager on at 7bet and betting margins of 5.24%.
At a high-level, LuckyMate probably wins a beauty pageant but, 7bet doesn't have the strange geographical layer in its search menu, which makes it more user-friendly.
When you are talking about the look and feel of a betting platform, there is no doubt that BetFusion is the closest to match to LuckyMate. It isn't a clone but there background colours are a very close match and the layout across the sportsbook and casino are really similar too.
The design advantage BetFusion has is the scroller bar that runs over the sportsbook is marginally cleaner, improving the usability of the site.
The quality of the sportsbook itself, however, is pretty much on par - with one exception. Betting margins at Fusion are somewhat less attractive at a lofty 8.03%.
You can almost rinse and repeat the above for our summary on the casino as well. BetFusion mirrors LuckyMate in nearly all aspects there, with a small variance in the overall game count. There are around 150 fewer titles at BetFusion.

Ashley, an Ipswich Town fan, is an experienced content writer in the sports & betting space, who also has an extensive background in data analytics. Those skills combine here to allow for unique angles to be taken across a host of topics.