In a move that would make even the most cynical of souls gasp, three separate lawsuits have been thrust upon the Auckland High Court, each one a different chapter in the saga against bet365, Super Group, and Skycity for offering online gambling to New Zealand residents.
Key Takeaways (if you can actually read them):
- Three High‑Court filings, all targeting the same trio of casino magnates.
- Skycity’s class‑action crusade stretches from February 2020 to 2026 – a real epic saga.
- Bet365, ever the drama king, loudly protests that the New Zealand court doesn’t hold the right to judge its soul.
The Operators’ Dinner at the Courtroom – Restitution, Licenses, and an Unintentional Comedy Show
The filings are presented as a concerted group action, yet they are still waiting their cue for joint proceedings. An interim name‑suppression order sits like a mute choir, while the plaintiffs whisper about New Zealand statutes in a language many can’t translate.
Skycity’s case names four defendants: Skycity Entertainment Group, Skycity Auckland Holdings Limited, and Malta‑based Silvereye Entertainment Limited – a funny mismatch of the local and the foreign, perhaps a metaphor for our globalized society’s endless quest for identity. Silvereye, a bright spotlight under the Malta Gaming Authority, carries Skycity’s online casino sauce across the seas. The first announcement to the NZX was made on March 6, in an effort to “test the lawfulness of online gaming operations operated by Silvereye on behalf of a faraway Skycity subsidiary.”
Included is a plea to become a funded class‑action, hoping to capture New Zealand player losses from February 2020 to February 2026. Skycity denies liability, waving a legal sword at the court, while BusinessDesk reports this could cover at least NZ$64.5 million in online revenue.
The Skycity claim structurally echoes a prior ruling by the European Court of Justice that stated Malta‑licensed operators couldn’t hide behind their home‑jurisdiction licence to evade civil restitution in EU member states. That ECJ ruling is still staying within Europe’s courts but provides a shadowy precedent that life‑suits replicators of MGA‑licensed platforms may find unsettling.
Bet365’s lawsuit names Hillside (Gaming) ENC, Hillside (Sports), and the enigmatic CEO Denise Coates as defendants. The company formally objects to the jurisdiction of New Zealand courts, almost as if it doubts the very existence of such a court.
Super Group’s action lists CEO Neal Menashe and several corporate entities – Bayton, DigiMedia, Digamma, GM Gaming, Baytree Alderney, and Baytree Interactive – all spinning under the Betway and Spin brands, and the “Kiwi’s Treasure” online casino, marketed as if it were a fabled exclusivity to New Zealand natives.
The legal skirmish follows the June 2025 amending to the Racing Industry Act 2020, which outlawed offshore operators (besides TAB NZ) accepting racing or sports bets from New Zealand residents. From May 1 the Online Casino Gambling Bill should extend those bans to online casino advertising, establishing a licensing framework for up to 15 operators by December 1 – the deadline for unlicensed providers to exit the market or face a courtroom audition.
Bet365, Super Group, and Skycity all publicly eye New Zealand licences with the same fervor typically reserved for acrobats preparing to leapt over a litany of legal commitments. Consequently, they will face the absurd juxtaposition of defending historical liability claims while simultaneously chasing regulated market access – a truly paradoxical circus.
In particular, the outcome of bet365’s jurisdictional challenge may tip the scales on how future courtrooms decide the fate of offshore‑operator liability, a question that will stir other jurisdictions up with a mix of intrigue, irony, and perhaps a few tissues.
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2026-04-22 08:27