This message too should never go out to a caller, it is nonsense to any industry outsider, who would not know what to make of it. The "engaged tone" is what callers should get if all lines are "busy" and a call can't be transferred. It's a well understood action by the public, and is interpreted as "they are exceptionally busy, I'll try later".
Now, this pales into insignificance compared to the further confusion just started by another poster.
This is farcical.
Only last week it was Digimedia, and even this was a surprise because Digimedia is a well known operator, but of the old Carmen Media/Belle Rock casinos, nothing whatsoever to do with Fortune Lounge, Jackpot Factory etc. Now it's not Digimedia, but GM gaming, but at the SAME ADDRESS as Digimedia
I don't think it's just experienced players, but the taxman that is wondering WTF is going on here.
Part of what is going on was revealed when Purple Lounge went under taking players' money with them. It turned out that what was behind all of this in their case was a scheme to dump the liabilities into a shell company with no assets, whilst all the money went to a different legal entity. It meant that players had to claim against the shell company with no assets, whilst what was left of their money was out of reach in a parent company, that then USED this players' money in an attempt to climb out of the pit it had found itself in by trying to fund a new venture with it.
Now, is GM Gaming yet another of these shell companies with no assets?
We all trusted that our money was safe in Purple Lounge, backed by the LGA via a regulation that it must be kept separate from company funds. We also thought that it was "impossible" for such a highly regarded casino to simply evaporate overnight with all the money.
Many probably now think it inconceivable that Fortune Lounge, Digimedia, GM gaming, with all those interconnected and successful operations would suddenly collapse and leave no assets, but we have been bitten once already, and nothing has happened to inspire confidence that the LGA have actually done anything to stop this from ever happening again, and if the LGA haven't put in safeguards, no one else will have.
When things go wrong, and then we are reassured by the casino operator that all is well, and it's just a minor glitch that has now been fixed, it's a case of "heard it all before". The problem is that no casino operator will tell the truth if it's bad news, so we cannot 100% trust that such a statement is true unless it is backed up independently, such as by eCogra or the LGA. Even eCogra isn't completely reliable, as it failed to warn players at TUSK owned casinos that they had 2 weeks before it collapsed and took their money with it, worse, eCogra allowed fake reassurances from the operator fool players into depositing even more money into a group that was already insolvent at the time.
As for another high profile failure, it's more a case of "when" rather than "if", and that is what keeps players on alert for the most minor signs that something is about to go very wrong. It is also why it is important that the RIGHT information is given out when there is a technical glitch. Whilst a short lived glitch in the small hours might only get noticed by one or two players, the problem comes if it gets posted about and seen by a much wider audience, and there has been no official statement at the time from the operator to it's customers, such as an email explaining that they may have experienced odd symptoms overnight, and that it was down to a short lived technical glitch that has now been dealt with.
I don't buy this excuse that it would clog up players' emails to send just this one additional email about something most players had not noticed, after all, players are deluged with emails making an offer that they are not eligible for at one or another FL casino, more than one email about the SAME promotion, whether or not they are eligible.
I suspect that the lack of an email was a decision made on the basis that no one would have noticed there had been a glitch, and so it would be better to keep quiet about anything ever having gone wrong and needed fixing.
Naturally, given the nature of the glitch, no players will be experiencing unexpected delays in receiving their withdrawals, so this at least is reassuring, and would be unlike the "technical glitch" that afflicted Purple Lounge that DID create weeks of delays in players receiving payment for about a month, before the final curtain fell on the operation.
There is also the matter of some very long term "maintenance" being undertaken by Microgaming which meant a couple of dozen games getting abruptly taken offline without notice nor explanation. Did someone else not pay their bill?
There has been one hell of a lot of odd manoeuverings going on recently in the industry, so clearly there is SOMETHING going on that is not merely a "minor technical glitch". More likely, it's these manoeuverings that have occasionally CAUSED these odd glitches that have afflicted players.