Vegas Nova Casino Review, Anjouan-Licensed With Fast Processing Claims and Limited Monthly Withdrawal Room
Veganova Ltd launched Vegas Nova Casino under an Anjouan Gaming Board licence, covering three languages with a sportsbook and a game library from a reasonable selection of providers. The 12-hour processing target is one of the faster claims reviewed at this licence level. The €10,000 monthly ceiling will constrain anyone winning meaningfully, and deposit limits requiring support contact to activate is a friction point worth noting.
Welcome Bonus
Bonuses and ongoing promotions are available once you register. Wagering requirements aren’t published in the data available here. All deposits must be wagered at least once before any withdrawal. Find the full terms before depositing. The responsible gambling section mentions deposit limits, though these are activated by contacting support rather than through self-service in your account.
Payments
No minimum deposit stated for all methods, no fees. Methods include Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Revolut, Skrill, Neteller, Sofort, Paysafecard, Rapid Transfer, BLIK, Interac and crypto across Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, USD Coin and TRON.
The withdrawal list matches almost exactly. BLIK doesn’t carry over to cashouts. Everything else does. Apple Pay, Google Pay and Revolut all work for withdrawals here, which is better than several comparable platforms. No withdrawal fees. Per-transaction limit is €5,000. Monthly ceiling is €10,000. Verification must be complete first. Pending runs up to 12 hours, with some requests waiting until midnight GMT before moving to the payments team. Withdrawals over €5,000 attract additional checks. E-wallets take up to 24 hours. Bank transfers take 3 to 7 days. Cards take 3 to 5 days. No weekend cashouts.
Games
Pragmatic Play, Play’n GO, NetEnt, Evolution Gaming, Yggdrasil, Wazdan, Blueprint Gaming, Betsoft, Aviatrix, Avatar UX, BGaming, Booming Games and Games Global are among the providers. No progressive jackpots. Slots, Megaways, trending titles, table games via the search bar, and a live casino with blackjack, roulette and baccarat running around the clock are all accessible. No game history tracking. RTP isn’t publicly audited.
Support and Responsible Gambling
Live chat runs 24/7 through a chatbot then human agent. Email goes to [email protected]. No FAQ section despite three language markets.
Responsible gambling covers deposit limits activated via support contact, a time-out from 24 hours to several weeks, a self-assessment test and self-exclusion. Four tools. The deposit limit requiring a chat request rather than self-service in your account creates dependency on support availability, which matters if you need to set a limit quickly. No wager limits, no loss limits, no session time controls and no reality check. No self-exclusion register participation.
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Apple Pay, Google Pay and Revolut all work for withdrawals
- Full deposit and withdrawal method match except BLIK
- No fees on deposits or withdrawals
- Self-assessment test present
- 12-hour processing target is fast for Anjouan level
- Live casino runs around the clock
Cons:
- €10,000 monthly withdrawal limit is restrictive
- Deposit limits require contacting support to activate
- No FAQ section
- No wager limits, loss limits or session time controls
- Anjouan licence offers limited player protection
- No progressive jackpots
- No game history tracking
Final Verdict
The payment method consistency and fast processing claim are the genuine strengths here. Apple Pay and Google Pay working in both directions puts Vegas Nova ahead of several Anjouan competitors, and a 12-hour pending target is meaningfully better than the multi-day waits documented elsewhere in this series. The €10,000 monthly cap will frustrate players on a meaningful run, and the responsible gambling setup needs self-service deposit controls rather than a chat-dependent activation system. Players who use digital wallets regularly and can work within the monthly limit will find this worth a look.


