HomeNewsB-Two Brings McLuck and More Back to Alabama and Georgia

B-Two Brings McLuck and More Back to Alabama and Georgia

Players in Alabama and Georgia can once again access sweepstakes casinos run by B-Two Operations.

Image: McLuck

After an August 7 update to site terms, brands like McLuck reopened in both states, letting players buy coins, play games, and redeem prizes. The move comes amid ongoing lawsuits against sweepstakes operators, but no new state bans in either Alabama or Georgia.

Some B-Two brands still exclude the states, so availability varies by site. For now, this is a cautious but clear return—and a signal that court cases alone aren’t pushing every operator out.

What Changed and What Didn’t

This return wasn’t triggered by a new law. Instead, it reflects how sweepstakes casinos are navigating lawsuits while keeping an eye on true bans. In recent months, several states passed restrictions that forced exits (including Montana and other jurisdictions), but Alabama and Georgia did not.

Legal fights continue, yet both states remain open terrain, and operators are watching whether action in places like New Jersey becomes a model elsewhere.

B-Two brought back multiple brands, including HelloMillions, SpinBlitz, PlayFame, and McLuck, following the August 7 terms update. However, some titles, such as Jackpota and MegaBonanza, still list the states as excluded.

Bottom line: availability depends on the site. Players should check each platform’s rules page before jumping in.

What Players Should Know in AL & GA

Access is back, which means you can purchase coins, enjoy games, and request redemptions of prizes according to each site’s posted terms. That said, access isn’t identical across every brand. Always review house rules on eligibility, promo details, and redemption timelines.

Terms can change quickly, and what’s true for one site today may differ tomorrow.

Legal activity continues. Alabama has ongoing cases, and Georgia courts have weighed in on disputes tied to arbitration and courts’ jurisdiction. Operators emphasize compliance, but they also react to updates in lawsuits, guidance, or policy.

If a site pauses in your state, it may be tied to a new filing or internal risk review, not necessarily a permanent exit.

For residents of Alabama and Georgia, the re-openings show that sweeps access can shift without warning. Confirm eligibility on each site, keep an eye on state announcements, and play responsibly. If changes happen again—whether from courtrooms or capitols—operators may adjust their lists of allowed states.

For now, B-Two’s move restores choice to players who prefer the dual-currency sweeps model, while highlighting how different legal tools—lawsuits versus bans—carry very different weight.