For players, the operator matters because it controls the site rules, account verification, restricted states, dispute terms, and the way purchases and prize redemptions are handled.
B-Two Operations Limited is an Isle of Man company that sits behind some of the biggest sweepstakes casino brands in the U.S. market. If you have played on McLuck, Hello Millions, or SpinBlitz, you have likely already seen the B-Two name in the site footer, Terms, or payment help pages.
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For players, the operator matters because it controls the site rules, account verification, restricted states, dispute terms, and the way purchases and prize redemptions are handled.
On its own corporate website, B-Two Operations Limited says it focuses on free-to-play, mobile-first, and social casino products. That lines up with what players see on its main brands, which are browser-based casino-style sites built around free play, optional purchases, and promotional sweepstakes entries.
In simple terms, B-Two is not just a background holding company. It is the operator that writes the rules and runs the customer-facing products on some of the best-known U.S. sweepstakes casino sites.
The clearest B-Two brands right now are McLuck, Hello Millions, and SpinBlitz. Each of these sites names B-Two Operations Limited as the operator on its legal pages, and each also lists B2 Services OÜ as the payment services agent. That is important because it helps explain why players may see one company handling the site itself and another company handling payments.
This is where things get more confusing, and it is worth explaining clearly. Many affiliate pages still group PlayFame, Jackpota, and Mega Bonanza under B-Two, but the current legal pages show a more complicated structure. PlayFame now says it is operated by PlayFame Operations Limited, while B-Two Operations Limited and B2 Services OÜ act as payment service agents.
Jackpota says it is owned and operated by Silver Social Operations Limited. Mega Bonanza says it is owned and operated by LuminaryPlay Operations Limited. So, while these brands may still be seen as part of the wider B2 ecosystem, they are not all directly operated by B-Two in the same way as McLuck, Hello Millions, and SpinBlitz.
B-Two’s brands follow the usual sweepstakes casino setup used across the U.S. market. Players use free-play currency for entertainment, and the sites also run promotional sweepstakes features that may allow prize redemptions if the player is eligible and follows the rules.
The Terms on these sites also make it clear that they do not offer real-money gambling and that the games are offered for entertainment purposes. For players, the important part is not the marketing language. It is the rule set behind the site: who can play, which states are blocked, how verification works, and what happens if there is a problem with a purchase or redemption.
B-Two’s casino-style sites are mostly built around slots, but they are not all exactly the same. Hello Millions publicly shows categories such as Live Dealer, Hold and Win, New Slots, Slots, Exclusive GC Games, Arcade Games, and Unlimited Play. SpinBlitz shows categories like Recommended, Best Games, Recently Launched, Hold and Win, Slots, Gold Coins Exclusives, and Unlimited Play.
That tells players these brands are not just simple slot lobbies. They are structured like full social casino hubs, with supplier restrictions, special categories, and in some cases live-style games.
The current Terms for McLuck and Hello Millions say players must be over 21 years of age or the age of majority in their jurisdiction, whichever is higher. The same terms also list specific prohibited territories. McLuck’s published list includes Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New York, Washington, and West Virginia.
Hello Millions includes those states and also lists New Jersey. Hello Millions also says it no longer offers promotional contests in California or Tennessee. That is a very useful detail for players because it shows that rules can differ from one sister site to another, even when the sites look closely related.
B-Two’s published Terms do not just say you need to be in an allowed state. They also say you must not use tools like a VPN or proxy to hide or change your real location. If a site believes you are trying to access games from a blocked state or are disguising your location, that can create serious account problems.
For players, that means you should not rely on workarounds. If your state is blocked or your brand has stopped offering promotional play where you live, it is better to know that upfront than to risk account restrictions later.
One of the most useful things B-Two’s help centers publish is a plain-language guide to verification. The support pages for Hello Millions and SpinBlitz say players may need to submit a government-issued photo ID, a selfie, and proof of address. SpinBlitz’s Terms also say the company may ask for copies of the payment method used for purchases and, in some cases, documents showing source of funds or source of wealth.
The Terms also say the company may restrict or terminate an account if requested documents are not provided within the stated time limit. For players, the big takeaway is simple: use your real name, keep your address current, and expect verification before important account actions are completed.
B-Two’s brands use the normal no purchase necessary sweepstakes structure, and their help centers clearly show that envelope or postal entry systems are part of that setup. McLuck and SpinBlitz both have support articles about when an account gets credited for envelopes, which shows that mail-in free entry is a real part of the player flow on these brands.
That matters because players often focus only on purchases and bonuses, when the better long-term habit is to read the official sweepstakes rules and mail-in instructions carefully. On these types of sites, small mistakes with envelope formatting or required details can lead to delays or rejected entries.
A detail that many players miss is the role of B2 Services OÜ. On McLuck, Hello Millions, and SpinBlitz support pages, the sites say that payments are issued and processed by B2 Services OÜ, while the sites themselves are owned and operated by B-Two Operations Limited. That means the gaming site and the payment service are connected but not identical.
It also helps explain why payment help articles and legal pages often name two different companies. If you ever need to solve a purchase issue, this split is worth remembering because the payment side of the process may be handled under the B2 Services name even though the site itself is run by B-Two.
B-Two’s major brands use strong legal language around disputes. Hello Millions says its Terms include binding arbitration and a class action waiver. The same Terms also say users may opt out of the arbitration agreement within 30 days if they have not already agreed to a prior arbitration provision with the service.
For players, the most practical point is that a serious dispute may not go through a normal court process in the way many people expect. Before you spend money on any sweepstakes site, it is worth reading the dispute section, especially if you care about how future complaints or claims would be handled.
McLuck’s Terms include a detail that gives players a better sense of how these sites work as a group. The Terms say the site’s Social Jackpots operate across the brands and are funded by gameplay across all participating games.
That tells players that the brand network is not just a marketing idea. At least in some features, the sites can operate as part of a shared system. This is one reason it makes sense to study the operator behind a site, not just the site name itself.
B-Two has also been part of broader industry developments. In May 2025, it was named as one of the founding partners of the Social Gaming Leadership Alliance, an industry group formed to promote standards and represent the sector. B-Two has also appeared in public legal filings.
A New Jersey case filed in November 2024 named B-Two Operations Ltd. doing business as McLuck.com as a defendant, and a separate case filed in December 2025 named B-Two Operations Ltd. doing business as SpinBlitz.
These filings do not decide the outcome of any claims by themselves, but they are part of the public record and show that the operator has drawn legal attention as the sweepstakes industry has come under more scrutiny.
If you want to confirm whether a site is truly connected to B-Two, use a simple checklist.
First, check the footer for the operator name, registration number, and Isle of Man address. Second, open the Terms and Privacy Policy and see whether the same company appears there too. Third, check the support pages for payment information, because B-Two-linked sites often also name B2 Services OÜ as the payment services agent.
Finally, look at the verification and envelope articles. Sites that share the same operator often share similar help-center structures, even if the branding looks different.
B-Two’s sweepstakes brands say they do not offer real-money gambling and that the games are for entertainment purposes. They use a sweepstakes-style model instead.
The clearest direct B-Two brands right now are McLuck, Hello Millions, and SpinBlitz, based on their published legal pages and support content.
B-Two’s support pages say B2 Services OÜ is the payment services agent. That means it handles payment-related processing while B-Two Operations Limited operates the site itself.
No. Some related brands now list other operating companies. For example, PlayFame lists PlayFame Operations Limited, Jackpota lists Silver Social Operations Limited, and Mega Bonanza lists LuminaryPlay Operations Limited.
Based on the current help pages and Terms, players may need a government-issued ID, a selfie, proof of address, and sometimes extra payment or source-of-funds documents.
No. The Terms for McLuck and Hello Millions say users must not use a VPN or proxy to hide their location.