The Malta Business Weekly

YouTuber admits Fifa gambling offences

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Two men who ran a betting website connected to the Fifa video game have pleaded guilty to offences under the UK’s Gambling Act.

Craig Douglas, a prominent gamer known as Nepenthez, and his business partner Dylan Rigby ran a website that let video gamers gamble virtual currency.

Douglas promoted the website to fans of his YouTube channel, which has more than 1.3 million subscriber­s.

The two men had previously pleaded not guilty. They are still to be sentenced.

It is the first time the UK’s gambling commission has prosecuted people for running an unlicensed gambling website connected to a video game.

The men ran a website called FUT Galaxy that let players transfer virtual currency out of the Fifa 17 video game, and use it to bet on real-life football games.

Winnings could then be transferre­d back in to the Fifa 17 video game.

But crucially, the Fifa virtual currency can also be sold on an online black market, giving the virtual coins real world value, like casino chips.

Similar betting websites connected to other video games also exist, and news site Bloomberg has suggested the market is worth billions of pounds.

Douglas, 32, from Ferndown, Dorset, admitted a charge of being an officer of a firm that provided facilities for gambling without an operating licence, and a further offence relating to the advertisin­g of unlawful gambling.

Rigby, 33, from Colchester, Essex, pleaded guilty to two charges connected to the provision of facilities for gambling, and a third offence linked to advertisin­g illegal gambling.

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