Monster Casino is a relaunch on the Progress Play platform of a casino that’s been around for years. It’s now got Playtech bingo as well.
Monster Casino has been around since 2017 but not in its current form; it was relaunched in 2021 as a Progress Play casino.
You may very well have come across the site before that when it was a Grace Media casino (or rather, a Nektan casino as it was prior to the takeover). In its previous incarnation it was unusually innovative for a skin site and was one of the first sites to offer players the Pragmatic Play bingo product back in summer 2019. Unfortunately there’s very little scope for innovation on Progress Play so although the casino still has some beautifully designed landing pages, once you register or log in you’ll be in a standard lobby that is largely devoid of any theming.
Having said that, Monster Casino does have an attached sportsbook which many players will consider a good reason to choose it over other Progress Play casinos, and in 2025 Playtech bingo rooms were added.
The sportsbook at Monster Casino is perhaps a little basic for really serious bettors. Although it offers a wide range of sports, some of the ranges of bets you can place are a little restricted. The horse racing is quite hard to find at first (a few races are in the main sportsbook area but the rest is in a tab of its own which you might not spot). They’ve recently introduced bet builders which is good to see, but it doesn’t cover many markets at the moment.
If all you are after is the occasional flutter on a big event, it should serve very well.
The version of Playtech bingo that you’ll find at Monster Casino and other Progress Play casinos is somewhat cut down from what you’d find at a bingo-first site such as Mecca Bingo. Designed for mobile phones, it lacks a schedule buy facility meaning that you can only buy tickets for the next game due to take place in any given bingo room (not such a hardship as it sounds since Playtech now run their daily, weekly and monthly big money bingo games in rooms of their own so you can easily buy tickets in advance).
There are also fewer bingo rooms – around a dozen whereas other Playtech bingo sites can have 20 or more. Deal Or No Deal Bingo 75 and 90 are both present and correct as are Fluffy Favourites Bingo, Bouncy Balls Bingo and Clover Rollover Bingo, but some of the other Playtech specials are missing. If you just want to play 75, 80 or 90 ball bingo in lively, busy bingo rooms with decent prizes you’ll be very well served, however. There’s also plenty of penny bingo for those on a budget.
One hosted chat room (somewhat unimaginatively named Big Chat Room) covers all bingo rooms at all Progress Play sites.
The latest version of the Progress Play lobby includes a “Providers” tab. When you’re in this area of the lobby you can browse through all of the games by each of the 70+ game providers they work with, or use the search box to bring up a list of all the providers and search within it. This can be useful if you’re looking for new games to try that are similar to ones you’ve enjoyed in the past, but unless you are an expert on iGaming providers and their subsidiaries it can also be a bit confusing. For example, Immortal Romance II and Avalon III are to be found under Stormcraft Studios and not Microgaming or Games Global. The more straightforward search box in the Slots part of the lobby is where to go if you know the name of the game you’re interested in.
If you’re in a hurry, the Featured lobby tab serves up around 100 of the most popular and trending games including Big Bass Bonanza, 9 Pots of Gold, Thunderstruck Stormchaser, Rainbow Riches, Reactoonz, Twin Spin, Immortal Romance, Madame Destiny Megaways, Starburst, Book of Dead and many others. What with that and the New lobby tab where you’ll find a frequently updated cornucopia of new releases, you may never need to explore the rest of the lobby, especially as games can easily be saved to the Favourite tab by activating the little heart icon on the game tile.
If you’ve played at a Progress Play casino in the past you may have felt the selection of progressive jackpots wasn’t great, but in 2025 it’s another story. Check out the Jackpots lobby tab and you’ll find Eyecon Super and Mega Jackpots, Red Tiger daily jackpots and Age of the Gods by Playtech plus several others.
If you fancy a change from slot games, the Casual lobby tab has video bingo, pachinko, lotto and minesweeper style games, lots of scratchcards and crash games including Aviator.
Moving on to the live casino part of the lobby, there’s roulette, blackjack and baccarat and a limited selection of gameshows by Evolution and Playtech.
Progress Play casinos – including Monster Casino – have perhaps the biggest array of deposit based promotions of anyone in the iGaming business. The offers change from month to month and the deposit codes (which typically award bonus or slot spins) are usually valid for multiple uses. There’s also regular cashback promotions and leaderboards. The bingo and sportsbook areas of the site have their own promotions, too.
Monster Casino also does well with the range of deposit methods it offers. There’s plenty of choice of different types – e-wallets, prepaid cards, mobile phone billing – and although it doesn’t accept Trustly (the most well known open banking payment method) it has OpenBanking which is very similar. There’s a withdrawal fee but it is quite small (and never more than £3) and the only deposit fee is for paying by phone bill.
If you like to be able to place sports bets, play slots and casino and participate in bingo games all on the same site, want to be able to claim a promotion whenever you make a deposit, and don’t want to be confined to a debit card as your only payment method, Monster Casino could be just the thing.
50 x bonus on slots, some games excluded. Video poker contributes at 5% and table games and jackpot games at 10%. Cash played not counted.
The standard Progress Play “Play Responsibly” document contains details of the safer gambling tools they offer, including wagering, loss and time limits as well as the usual deposit limits, reality check, time out and self exclusion. These can be accessed from account settings and they also include direct links to contact customer support should you need assistance. The document also includes links to outside tools such as internet filtering software and to sources of help and advice. So despite the writing style leaving a lot to be desired (it reads as if it’s been badly translated from another language by ChatGPT) it goes well beyond the minimum that’s required.