Your reply is sure helpful!!!! I did not know the rogues were rogues until I tried withdrawals and had problems and came here for information on casinos. I have been around here for 5 years like you said, but most of that time I played at microgaming casinos, until they quit allowing USA casinos. I have tried to use alternatives, but most of them are rogue operations. I looked up AC Casino on Casinomester before playing and could find no references to them. I guess my alternative at this point is to quit playing online casinos as I really do not trust any of them. This was my first post on Casinomeister as I thought it would be good information for people who do not know anything about AC Casino, but I guess on this site the senior posters think I should not post about it because I should have known better. KMA
Of course not, they are rogue, not stupid.
Many rogues do their best to hide negative comment. Take the Virtual group. Yet again, they are going through a rebranding exercise in order to distance their casinos from their past sins. Take the "new" casino "Ruby Slots". There was initially nothing on the net about them, a clean slate to start again. Then, it was discovered they were not so new after all, but the start of a rebranding exercise, and Ruby Slots is in fact a rebranded Virtual rogue. The same thing was done with the Crystal Palace group, the whole lot rebranded with the evidence strongly suggesting Virtual tried to run them "off the radar" as a separate and "new" group.
Operia have over a HUNDRED brands, making it very hard to find anything negative about an individual skin. AC is particularly sneaky as it uses the abbreviation "AC" rather than it's full name. This is why searching "AC Casino" didn't turn up anything that could act as a warning.
When I saw your post, I didn't know for sure, but the name "AC Casino" triggered my gut feeling that there was something very wrong about them. This is the benefit of hanging around here, you absorb information into your subconcious, and this can give you those "gut feelings" about a casino name.
If you do get this feeling, don't take "no news = good news" for an answer when doing the initial research, dig deeper. Often the clue is in the underlying company that operates a skin, not the brand itself. In this case, the common link is in the small print, Operia. Operia joins all the dots and delivers the smoking gun evidence that should tell one to avoid at all costs.
As for their main brand, Pamper, this came to light ages ago, terrible choice of name, and fake company address that according to Google street view was a Pizza shop. They had to send a rep here to fight the resulting fire, and who had to come clean and admit the address was not their real office, it was merely an address with no staff, an empty office above a pizza shop where any mail was occasionally collected and forwarded to where they really were, Costa Rica, a place well known for NOT issuing gambling licenses, which is why many rogues operate from there. They used a "dirty trick" to trick players into thinking they were UK based, but they got caught out. With their Pamper brand well and truly flushed down the crapper, they had to start spitting out sister brands to lure in fresh meat to the slaughter, so along comes AC Casino and others, all with the same INSANE bonus offers.