Virgin Games sister sites include brands like Rainbow Riches, Jackpot Joy and Bally Casino, alongside several other domains under the Gamesys Operations Limited licence (UKGC: 38905), which is the licence it operates under.
Virgin Games is owned by Bally's Corporation but operates under Gamesys Operations Limited (UKGC: 38905).
The Gamesys licence dates back to November 2014 but Bally's acquired it in 2021. With the complexity of previous commercials aside, the one thing that is undeniable is the wealth of experience that will be pulling the strings behind the scenes.
With that in mind, you are right to have high hopes for what the Virgin Games sister sites can deliver.

Virgin Games provides punters with a decent platform on which to explore their gambling needs.
The site itself ties close to the wider Virgin brand, opting for bright red banner sections and contrasted white text, whilst the main game lobby is the opposite, a white background and red text. It looks smart and the contrast between header and main site means the bold colour isn't overwhelming.
Structurally, the site works well too. Game tiles are well-sized and laid out in a manner that is easy to navigate and interact with, whilst the header bar features a number of category navigation options, including "Slots" and "Live Casino".
As for the game collection itself, you're looking at around 2,000 games being offered. That's somewhere in the realms of average, when comparing to the wider casino industry.
Virgin Games delivers a tidy casino platform, but it also leaves plenty of room for growth and improvement.
We now take a look at some of the Virgin Games sister sites to see whether or not then can build on the solid base.
If you put the two brands next to one another you will quickly peg Monopoly Casino as one of the Virgin Games sister sites. There are a host of shared similarities, but also a few key differences to be aware of as well.
What you have in terms of similarities is mainly underpinned in the core structure. That includes the dual-horizontal scroller bars at the top of the page, which are the driving force of navigation, allowing moves between category and sub-category, and the game lobby layout itself. Game tiles are identically laid out, sized the same and, in terms of game count, it is again an offering of just over 2,000 titles.

Then we get onto a couple of differences. The colour scheme is one that jumps off the page. Monopoly Casino is navy blue in its entirety as a base colour, with text white throughout. It's a subjective point but we prefer it.
The only place that background isn't consistent is in the sportsbook. The fact there is a sportsbook at Monopoly Casino is the most noteworthy part of that sentence though, with Virgin Games not offering one!
Rainbow Riches is a brand name born out of the famed casino games of the same branding.
That is one of the key differences you can feel when playing at Rainbow Riches, compared to Virgin Games, with the games of that title featuring in a prominent manner. Go deeper than that, however, and it's clear Rainbow Riches is a sister site.

The game count is in the ballpark of 2,000 titles, the tiles are laid out in as if cloned and the navigation around the site is replicated too. None of this is an issue, of course, with those elements all fairly slick.
It does mean that the site also suffers from the same lack of game filtering though, which is a shame. Although, that said, there is a text search functionality to utilise. That is something, at least.
The colour theme is very similar to Virgin Games too. There is no red - it's green instead - but the site does opt for the coloured header and footer, separated by a white background. You then have the added upside of Rainbow Riches boasting a sportsbook as well.
Bally Casino is the most blatant of the Virgin Games sister sites. Focussing on the casino side of the site initially, the two are almost complete replicas of one another.
The shared structure is fairly commonplace across the Gamesys universe, but Bally Casino goes as far as using the same red and white colour scheme. It means the only real variation between the casinos is a logo.

That isn't the be all and end all though. Bally Casino also offers a sportsbook, which gives it a point of difference to Virgin, albeit not to all of the sister sites. The sportsbook at Bally, as it is at other brands mentioned here, is distinctly average.
There are 30-plus sports available to bet on, including key sports like horse racing and football, alongside more obscure offerings like bandy. However, market depths aren't particularly extensive.
It's a nice addition on top of the Virgin Games offering, but is very much for the casino bettor that enjoys the occasional sports dabble and not the other way around.

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.