Comtrade Gaming is the 20-plus-year-old Slovenian platform and RGS business that only started making its own slots in February 2024, under the in-house label CG Games. It’s a genuinely unusual route into slot content: most studios build games first and infrastructure later, but Comtrade had already spent two decades supplying the technical mechanics and remote game servers other providers plug their games into before it ever released one of its own. Our verdict: 6/10. This Comtrade Gaming review scopes specifically to the CG Games slot catalogue — the best releases ranked, the RTP tiers, the licence file, and how a platform company’s first swing at content actually holds up.
Where to Play Comtrade Gaming Slots
Comtrade Gaming at a glance
The essentials — a two-decade platform business whose slot-content arm is barely two years old.
| Full name | ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O., trading as Comtrade Gaming; slot content published under the CG Games label |
|---|---|
| Founded | Comtrade Gaming’s first gaming software project dates to 2001; CG Games launched as a dedicated content division in February 2024 |
| Headquarters | Ljubljana, Slovenia — part of the wider Comtrade Group (est. 1991), alongside Comtrade Software and Comtrade Digital Services |
| UKGC licence | ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O., account 25830, Gambling Software (Remote) licence active since 17 February 2015; trading names comtrade and comtrade gaming both active |
| Scale | 7 technology centres, around 380 staff group-wide (per Comtrade Gaming’s own site) — almost all on the platform/RGS side, not slot content |
| CG Games catalogue | 20+ titles at launch (8 video slots, 2 crash games); mid-20s slot titles as of mid-2026, plus a small crash/table-games line |
| Typical RTP | Low-to-mid-90s through mid-90s depending on operator-selected tier; most titles ship 2–3 selectable builds |
| Best-known games | Sweet Treasures, Break the Bank, Wild Miner, Eyes of Ra |
| Our score | 6/10 — full verdict below |
✓ Facts checked against the UKGC business licence register (account 25830) and Comtrade Gaming’s own published site — 6 July 2026
The best CG Games slots: 10 games that actually matter
The best Comtrade Gaming slots are all recent by definition — CG Games’ entire catalogue is young enough that “best ever” and “best right now” are almost the same list. RTPs quoted are the published defaults from Comtrade Gaming’s own game information sheets; nearly every title ships two or three selectable tiers, so always check the in-game paytable before you play. The full ranked catalogue is near the end of the page.
1. Sweet Treasures (2024)
A candy-land tumbling slot on a 6-reel, 5-row grid, and the CG Games title that gets cited most often by third-party slot databases — VegasSlotsOnline runs a dedicated page on it, which is more outside coverage than any other CG Games release has attracted so far. Cascading wins, a Bonus Buy option and a random multiplier that can land anywhere from 2x to 500x on a single tumble give it real swing for a “very high” volatility rating, with a published hit frequency of 28.89% and RTP set at either 94.02% or 96.09% depending on the build.
| Layout | 5 x 6 Reels |
|---|---|
| Volatility | Very High |
| Hit frequency | 28.89% |

2. Break the Bank (2024)
A money-heist comedy built around “Porky Pete”, a cartoon pig bandit fleeing “Officer Barkington” through the fictional city of Swinetropolis — one of CG Games’ original eight launch titles and, going by how often Comtrade’s own marketing leans on it, the closest thing the catalogue has to a flagship. A 3×5 grid with 25 paylines, a Hold and Win vault-symbol feature and a chase-themed free spins round sit behind an RTP of 93.96% or 95.95% at medium volatility — noticeably gentler than most of the rest of the launch lineup.
| Layout | 3 x 5 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 25 |
| Volatility | Medium |

3. Wild Miner (2024)
A gold-mine adventure set in “Crystal Canyon” on a 5×4 grid with 30 paylines, built around a pick-style Miner Feature that layers on top of a standard free-games-and-wilds shell. It’s the gentlest thing CG Games has published — Comtrade’s own sheet rates it “low” volatility, unusual for a launch-era title when most studios lead with something punchier — at 94.15% or 96.11% RTP depending on the operator’s chosen build.
| Layout | 5 x 4 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 30 |
| Volatility | Low |

4. Eyes of Ra (2024)
CG Games’ entry in slots’ most crowded genre — Ancient Egypt — on a conventional 5×3, 25-payline grid, distinguished mostly by a stacked-symbol free games feature and a pick bonus. High volatility and a published RTP of 93.78% or 95.95% put it toward the sharper end of the launch catalogue. It’s a competent, unremarkable execution of a theme every studio on this site has also tried at least once, which is a fair description of where CG Games sits industry-wide right now: capable, not yet distinctive.
| Layout | 5 x 3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 25 |
| Volatility | High |

5. Red Beard Treasures (2024)
A pirate-themed 5×3, 25-payline release carrying four separate in-game jackpots (Mini, Minor, Maxi and Grand) alongside a Hold and Win round and free spins with extra wilds and multipliers. High volatility, RTP of 94% or 96% — the jackpot ladder is the one structural touch that sets it apart from the rest of the launch wave, most of which stick to a single flat bonus round.
| Layout | 5 x 3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 25 |
| Volatility | High |

6. The Big, the Fat and the Ugly (2024)
A spaghetti-Western wanted-poster theme — the title is a blunt nod to Sergio Leone — on a 5×3, 20-payline grid with wild, scatter and mystery symbols feeding a free games round. High volatility, 94.05% or 96.03% RTP. It’s one of the more visually confident launch titles, with genuine character art on the bounty-poster symbols rather than the generic gem-and-fruit filler that pads out weaker slots in the catalogue.
| Layout | 5 x 3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 20 |
| Volatility | High |

7. Diamond King (2024)
An African-savannah title on a 3×5, 50-payline grid, with wild safari animals alongside a mystery-symbol mechanic and a four-tier jackpot feature (Mega, Major, Maxi, Mini) similar in spirit to Red Beard Treasures’ ladder. Very high volatility and 94.08% or 96.23% RTP make it one of the sharper-edged bets in the range, and it shares enough visual DNA with White Elephant below that the two read as loose siblings within the catalogue.
| Layout | 3 x 5 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 50 |
| Volatility | Very High |

8. White Elephant (2024)
A Thailand-set 5×3, 50-payline slot themed around a golden elephant symbol standing in for wealth and prosperity, with a “Splash Feature” bonus round and a jackpot sitting alongside the standard wild-and-free-games shell. High volatility, RTP of 94.04% or 96.25%. Alongside Diamond King it shows CG Games leaning on the wide-jungle/safari aesthetic more than once in a catalogue barely two dozen titles deep — a small studio’s early releases inevitably repeat a handful of safe visual templates, and this is the clearest example here.
| Layout | 5 x 3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 50 |
| Volatility | High |

9. Fortune Farming (2024)
A countryside farm theme on an unusual 3x4x3 reel configuration (ten paylines), with a wild Piggy character, a Wheel of Fortune random-prize feature and a Hold & Win round chained together for extra escalation. Medium-high volatility, hit frequency of 25.04%, and three selectable RTP tiers — 92%, 94% or 96% — the widest RTP spread of any CG Games title, which is either generous operator flexibility or a red flag depending on which end of it you’re actually served.
| Layout | 3x4x3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 10 |
| Volatility | Medium High |
| Hit frequency | 25.04% |

10. Diamond Blitz (2024)
A compact, classic-fruit-machine-style throwback: a 3×3 grid with just 5 paylines, built around a “Blitz Collect” mechanic and an in-game progressive jackpot fed by a Diamond Feature whose trigger probability rises as you collect more diamond symbols. High volatility, 94.08% or 96.23% RTP. It shares its Blitz Collect engine with a companion title, Fruity Blitz, in what’s currently the closest thing CG Games has to an internal mechanic family rather than a one-off theme reskin.
| Layout | 3 x 3 |
|---|---|
| Paylines | 5 |
| Volatility | High |

Comtrade Gaming vs the studios it competes with
Comtrade Gaming’s actual competitive position is unusual: as a platform and RGS business it competes with names like SOFTSWISS and Playtech’s infrastructure arm, but the CG Games slot catalogue itself is judged here purely against other young or dual-business studios we’ve reviewed. Against our previously reviewed studios:
| Comtrade Gaming (CG Games) | Oryx Gaming | Skywind Group | DreamSpin | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2001 (platform); CG Games content division, Feb 2024 | 2010, Slovenia | 2012, Minsk (now Isle of Man) | 2023 |
| Core business | Platform/RGS + iCore igaming platform, content is the newer add-on | Licence-and-infrastructure umbrella over 5 house studios (Bragg Gaming) | Full-stack platform + original + branded-IP content studio | Content only, distributed via partners |
| Slot catalogue size | ~20–25 | Player-facing hits mostly via Wild Streak Gaming subsidiary | 200+ | A handful so far |
| Calling card | None yet — still establishing one | Temujin Treasures; Wild Streak house style | Branded IP (Resident Evil, CSI) + Asian-market strength | Yggdrasil YG Masters + Light & Wonder OpenGaming combo |
| UK licence since | 2015 (parent account); CG Games games certified UK late 2024 | 2021 | Established multi-year UK presence | Recent |
The honest read: Comtrade Gaming is the newest entrant to slot content of any studio on this site by actual game-development age, even though the corporate parent is two decades old. That “platform business grows a content arm” shape is exactly what Oryx Gaming did years earlier out of the same country — both are Slovenian B2B operations where the licence-holding entity is broader than the part that actually makes games — and it’s the long-term model Skywind Group has already proven can scale into a 200-plus-title, branded-IP-carrying studio, albeit over 12 years rather than two. CG Games hasn’t earned a signature mechanic yet the way Oryx’s Wild Streak arm or Skywind’s branded catalogue have; right now it’s a capable, still-generic slate riding on infrastructure Comtrade already had lying around.
The game families, in depth
A catalogue too young to have real “franchises” yet, but two structural groupings are already visible. The full ranked list covers the rest.
The jackpot-ladder pair
Red Beard Treasures and Diamond King both run a four-tier in-game jackpot (Mini/Minor/Maxi/Grand or Mega/Major/Maxi/Mini depending on the title) stacked on top of an otherwise conventional wild-and-free-spins shell — the closest thing to a repeated structural choice across CG Games’ early slate.
The Blitz mechanic family
Diamond Blitz and its companion title Fruity Blitz share a “Blitz Collect” progressive-trigger engine on compact 3×3 grids, the one case so far of CG Games reusing its own mechanic across more than one release rather than building each title from scratch.
The safari/jungle pairing
Diamond King and White Elephant both lean on wide-savannah or jungle-temple visual themes with wild-animal symbol sets — not a shared mechanic, just the clearest sign yet of a young catalogue settling into a handful of safe, well-tested visual templates.
Signature mechanics & technology
CG Games doesn’t yet have a mechanic distinctive enough to license out the way Yggdrasil’s or Big Time Gaming’s are, but a few house features recur:
Blitz Collect
A progressive-jackpot trigger whose odds increase as matching symbols land, used on Diamond Blitz and Fruity Blitz — the studio’s closest thing to a proprietary engine so far, though it’s a well-worn category of mechanic (broadly similar in spirit to Novomatic/Greentube’s own jackpot-collector features) rather than a genuine industry first.
Multi-tier in-game jackpots
Red Beard Treasures and Diamond King both run four-rung jackpot ladders (typically Mini through Grand), a structural choice rather than a licensed mechanic, giving both titles a bigger “something’s always close” feeling than the studio’s flatter free-spins-only releases.
Comtrade’s own RGS underneath everything
Every CG Games title runs on Comtrade Gaming’s in-house Remote Game Server, the same infrastructure Comtrade has supplied to other operators and vendors for two decades — genuinely the studio’s real technical edge, even if it’s invisible to players and shows up only as stable performance and fast local certification (Malta, Romania, UK and Brazil across nearly every title reviewed here).
Comtrade Gaming (CG Games) slots RTP: the real numbers
The defaults: every CG Games title we could check publishes two or three selectable RTP builds, typically clustered in the low-90s to mid-90s — for example Break the Bank at 93.96%/95.95%, Wild Miner at 94.15%/96.11%, and Fortune Farming spanning the widest range in the catalogue at 92%/94%/96%.
Adjustable tiers, on every title: unlike studios that reserve multi-RTP builds for a handful of flagship releases, CG Games appears to ship every slot we checked with at least two selectable tiers as standard — which makes checking the in-game paytable before you play not just good practice but close to essential here, since the gap between a game’s low and high build regularly runs 2 full percentage points.
Volatility spread: genuinely wide for such a young catalogue, from Wild Miner’s “low” rating up to Sweet Treasures and Diamond King’s “very high” — there’s a real game here for a cautious low-stakes session and a separate one for a bonus-hunter, which is a more deliberate range than some launch slates manage.
Max wins: published ceilings are thin on the ground across Comtrade’s own game sheets; the one figure we could independently source is VegasSlotsOnline’s listing of Sweet Treasures at up to 4,341x the stake. Where Comtrade’s own sheet doesn’t publish a max-win figure, we’ve said so rather than guess. Our responsible gambling guide applies as always.
From platform supplier to first-time slot studio
| Year | What happened |
|---|---|
| 1991 | Comtrade Group founded in the former Yugoslavia by Serbian businessman Veselin Jevrosimović, later growing into a multi-line IT and technology group |
| 2001 | Comtrade launches its first gaming software project, the start of what becomes the dedicated Comtrade Gaming business |
| 2015 | ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O. secures its UK Gambling Commission Gambling Software licence (account 25830) |
| Feb 2024 | Comtrade Gaming launches CG Games as a dedicated in-house content division, debuting with 8 video slots and 2 crash games, including Break the Bank, Sweet Treasures, Wild Miner and Space Aviator |
| 2024 | CG Games secures ONJN certification for Romania and a standalone UK licence for its games; catalogue grows past the initial launch wave |
| 2025 | CG Games’ portfolio certified for the Brazilian market; the studio joins the SOFTSWISS Game Aggregator (July) and signs a distribution partnership with Interwetten (September) |
| 2026 | Comtrade Gaming wins “Best International Market Debut in Brazil” at the SiGMA South America Awards; CG Games catalogue continues expanding at a steady pace |
The arc that matters: this is a platform and infrastructure company of real scale — 380-odd staff, seven technology centres, two decades of B2B relationships with operators including Betfred, Dafabet and M88 — that only decided to become a slot studio in its own right in 2024, using technology it already owned rather than building from zero. That’s a genuinely different starting position to almost every other studio on this site, for better and worse.
The people behind CG Games

A commercial officer, not a game designer, fronting the launch
Steven Valentine, Comtrade Gaming’s Chief Commercial Officer, has been the public face of the CG Games launch in trade press, framing the division’s advantage as inherited rather than invented: “we already had operational expertise in game mechanics and technology” from two decades of platform work, he told CasinoBeats in mid-2024, meaning CG Games mostly needed to add “game concept and design elements” on top of infrastructure Comtrade already owned.
A leadership team built from tier-1 operator hires
Comtrade brought in Jason O’Shea and Anja Bojetu, both with backgrounds at established tier-1 providers, specifically to drive CG Games’ business development — a recruitment pattern that reads as buying market access and operator relationships rather than creative pedigree, consistent with a platform company’s instinct for solving distribution first.
Aleš Gornjec and the wider Comtrade Gaming leadership
Aleš Gornjec holds the general manager role across Comtrade Gaming’s broader platform business, which CG Games sits inside as one division among several (iCore, sCore, gCore/Games, and professional services) — a structure that makes CG Games one bet among many for a company whose core revenue still comes from platform and infrastructure contracts, not slot royalties.
Is Comtrade Gaming fair? Licensing, regulation & the record
Checked against the Gambling Commission’s public register on 6 July 2026.
The licence. ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O. holds UKGC account 25830, with a Gambling Software (Remote) licence current and active since 17 February 2015 — among the longer-standing licences of any studio on this site, reflecting Comtrade’s platform-business history rather than its brand-new slot content. Trading names comtrade and comtrade gaming are both listed as active. Verify it yourself on the UKGC public register.
The record. Clean: no regulatory actions listed against ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O. on the UKGC’s public register that we can find, and no reported UKGC fines or sanctions in trade press.
So is it fair? Yes on the available evidence — a long-standing, active UK licence held by the parent business, third-party lab certification underpinning the games we could check (Malta, Romania, Brazil alongside the UK on nearly every CG Games title), and no adverse regulatory record. The caveat worth stating plainly: CG Games itself is new enough that it hasn’t yet accumulated the years of scrutiny an older single-brand studio has.
The biggest Comtrade Gaming numbers
A studio too new to have a documented record of verified player wins. Rather than pad this out with unverifiable claims, here’s the context that’s actually real and sourced:
| The number | What it is | The detail |
|---|---|---|
| 4,341x | Sweet Treasures’ max win, per VegasSlotsOnline | The only third-party-sourced max-win figure we could independently verify for any CG Games title |
| 20+ | CG Games’ launch catalogue size | 8 video slots and 2 crash games at the February 2024 debut, per Comtrade’s own announcement |
| 4 | Markets certified as of 2025 | Malta, Romania (ONJN), United Kingdom and Brazil |
| 1 | Industry award | Comtrade Gaming’s “Best International Market Debut in Brazil” at the SiGMA South America Awards, April 2026 |
No verified single-spin jackpot or big-win record exists for CG Games yet that we can source to a provider press release, casino announcement or credible news report — so, honestly, we haven’t included one. We’ll update this section the moment one is verifiable. No gameplay video facades appear on this page for the same reason: we couldn’t find a genuine CG Games video that isn’t a fan reupload of unclear origin, and we’d rather omit the section than embed something we can’t stand behind.
Beyond the reels
The corners of the story a catalogue-only review would miss:
A platform company betting on itself
Most new slot studios have to build technical infrastructure and win platform-integration deals from a standing start; CG Games skipped that entirely, launching on an RGS and operator relationship network Comtrade had already spent 20-plus years building for other people’s games. That’s a genuine structural advantage almost no other studio on this site had at launch.
Existing tier-1 relationships, repurposed
CG Games’ content reached operators including Betfred, Dafabet and M88 within its first year — access that normally takes a new studio years of relationship-building to earn, inherited here from Comtrade’s pre-existing commercial footprint rather than won game by game.
A crash-games line running in parallel
Alongside its slots, CG Games publishes crash games (Space Aviator, Crash Soccer, Witch Crash, Pilot Piggy) and a small table-games line including Roulette and Crypto Rush — a broader content spread at launch than most single-focus slot studios attempt, though it’s explicitly out of scope for this review, which covers CG Games’ slot catalogue only.
The company behind the games

CG Games is a small division of a much bigger, older company. Comtrade Gaming’s core business — the iCore platform, sCore gaming-systems management and gCore remote game server that predate CG Games by two decades — is independently certified rather than just self-described: its sCore G2S Protocol engine holds a Gaming Labs International (GLI) certificate and meets the Gaming Standards Association’s G2S v2.1 compliance standard, the iCore platform is ISO 9001:2015 certified through SIQ/IQNet, and the company holds a Class II licence from Romania’s ONJN gambling regulator alongside its UK one. It’s also a supporter of GambleAware, Britain’s leading gambling-harm-reduction charity.
That platform business is what major operators and even other studios have relied on: Comtrade’s technology has underpinned deals with Bally Technologies, Ainsworth Game Technology, Genting Alderney, Australia’s Tatts Group and, notably, Microgaming — which chose Comtrade’s iCore platform to extend the reach of its own game catalogue. None of those relationships involve CG Games’ slots directly, but they’re the commercial and technical foundation CG Games launched from, run by a leadership team including CEO Aleš Gornjec and Chief Commercial Officer Steven Valentine.
New Comtrade Gaming slots: what’s launched for 2025–26
The state of CG Games right now: a steadily growing slot catalogue backed by a busier-than-usual run of news on the wider Comtrade Gaming platform side — distribution deals with SOFTSWISS (July 2025) and Interwetten (September 2025), a platform migration for lottery-terminal operator Canadian Bank Note, and, most recently, a strategic partnership to power operator 7bet’s expansion into Finland and the Baltics. None of that is CG Games-specific, but it’s the commercial engine any new CG Games release ultimately gets distributed through.
World Cup Glory — the newest release
CG Games’ most recent and most conspicuously timed launch is World Cup Glory, a football-themed slot released to coincide with the 2026 World Cup — the catalogue’s first and only sports-themed title. It breaks from CG Games’ usual house style in a few real ways: a 4×6 reel layout with 40 paylines (the widest grid in the catalogue), Very Low volatility against a catalogue that otherwise leans High to Very High, and the richest feature list of any CG Games slot — scatters, bonus buy, multiplier, free games, wild substitutes, collecting symbols, respins and a dedicated bonus game, all in one title. RTP is set at 96%, 94% or 92% depending on the operator’s chosen build, with a 200x max multiplier and a 52.43% hit frequency. It’s too new for any independent verification of real-money performance, which is why it sits in this section rather than the top-10 list above, but on specification alone it’s the most ambitious single release CG Games has published.
| Release | When | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| World Cup Glory | 2026 | Football-themed, timed to the 2026 World Cup — Very Low volatility and the widest grid (4×6, 40 paylines) in the catalogue |
| Divine Forge of Wilds | 2025 | Part of the second wave extending past the original eight-slot launch |
| Layla Carter and the Pharaoh’s Gold | 2025 | A step-crash title (not a conventional slot) showing CG Games experimenting outside pure reel-spinning formats |
| Fortune Panda / Fortune Samba | 2025–26 | A growing “Fortune” naming line extending the studio’s fruit-and-luck theming |
Catalogue growth here is genuinely gradual rather than a monthly-release cadence — the distribution deals and platform migrations are the bigger 2025–26 story than any individual game, with World Cup Glory as the one release that stands out on its own merits. Paytable first, always.
What players actually say
CG Games is young and niche enough that dedicated player discussion is thin — there’s no deep well of forum sentiment the way there is for a decade-old studio, and we won’t invent one.
What third-party coverage there is: VegasSlotsOnline’s write-up on Sweet Treasures describes the wider catalogue’s tone as “lighthearted”, combining “playful themes with polished releases” — a fair, if modest, characterisation that matches what we found building this page: competent execution, likeable art direction, nothing yet that reviewers are calling genuinely original.
The gripes, plainly: no signature mechanic of its own yet, a catalogue still leaning on familiar themes (Egypt, pirates, Wild West, safari) that every studio on this site has also covered, and close to zero independent player-win or big-hit record to point to. All fair for a slot studio not yet two years into its first product line — but real limitations, not ones we’re going to paper over.
Which Comtrade Gaming slot should you play?
The thirty-second version of everything above:
| If you want… | Play | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The most talked-about release | Sweet Treasures | The one CG Games title with genuine independent third-party coverage |
| Gentler, lower-volatility play | Wild Miner | The catalogue’s only “low” volatility rating |
| The biggest published max win | Sweet Treasures | Up to 4,341x per VegasSlotsOnline, the only sourced figure we have |
| A jackpot-ladder structure | Red Beard Treasures or Diamond King | Both run four-tier in-game jackpots rather than a single flat bonus |
| A classic, compact format | Diamond Blitz | A 3×3, 5-payline throwback with its own Blitz Collect progressive |
Our verdict on Comtrade Gaming
Slot Providers score: 6/10 — a capable, well-resourced platform business making a credible but not yet distinctive first attempt at its own slot catalogue, backed by genuinely useful infrastructure and operator relationships most new studios don’t start with.
| Game quality | 6/10 — Sweet Treasures and Break the Bank are the standouts; several others feel like safe, competent theme exercises |
|---|---|
| Innovation | 4/10 — no signature mechanic of its own yet, beyond a shared Blitz Collect engine on two titles |
| Maths & transparency | 7/10 — every title we checked publishes clear multi-tier RTPs on Comtrade’s own site |
| Mobile experience | 6/10 — standard modern build quality, nothing that stood out either way |
| Catalogue depth | 4/10 — ~20–25 titles after two-plus years, thin next to established studios but reasonable for the age |
What Comtrade Gaming gets right
- Genuine two-decade RGS and platform infrastructure underneath every release, not a studio starting from zero
- Every title we checked publishes clear, multi-tier RTPs on Comtrade’s own site — no hidden figures
- Real day-one operator relationships (Betfred, Dafabet, M88) inherited from the parent platform business
- Growing structural variety — jackpot ladders, the Blitz Collect mechanic, and a widening theme range
Where it still falls short
- No signature, proprietary mechanic of its own yet — Blitz Collect is the closest, and it’s a well-worn category
- Catalogue still thin at roughly 25 titles after two-plus years
- No independently confirmed UK casino carrier for CG Games slots at the time of writing
- Several early titles lean on the same safari/jungle visual template rather than genuine variety
Comtrade Gaming suits players curious about a new name backed by real technical infrastructure, and anyone who wants a studio that discloses its RTP tiers clearly. Look elsewhere if you want deep catalogue history or a genuine in-house mechanic — Skywind Group’s branded-IP catalogue or Oryx Gaming’s Wild Streak house style both offer far more track record from a similarly platform-rooted starting point.
Every Comtrade Gaming slot that matters, ranked
From a catalogue of roughly 25 slot titles as of mid-2026 (CG Games also publishes several crash and table games, out of scope here), ranked by craft, structural interest and how well they hold up against the rest of the young slate.
| # | Slot | Year | Max win | In one line |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sweet Treasures | 2024 | — | The catalogue’s most independently-covered release |
| 2 | Break the Bank | 2024 | — | The comedic money-heist launch flagship |
| 3 | Wild Miner | 2024 | — | The catalogue’s only low-volatility title |
| 4 | Eyes of Ra | 2024 | — | A competent, unremarkable Egyptian theme |
| 5 | Red Beard Treasures | 2024 | — | Four-tier jackpot ladder on a pirate theme |
| 6* | World Cup Glory | 2026 | 200x | A football-themed launch timed to the 2026 World Cup, Very Low volatility and the catalogue’s widest layout (4×6, 40 paylines) |
| 7 | The Big, the Fat and the Ugly | 2024 | — | A confident spaghetti-Western wanted-poster theme |
| 8 | Diamond King | 2024 | — | A safari theme with its own jackpot ladder |
| 9 | White Elephant | 2024 | — | A temple-set sibling to Diamond King |
| 10 | Fortune Farming | 2024 | — | The widest RTP spread in the catalogue (92–96%) |
| 11 | Diamond Blitz | 2024 | — | A compact 3×3 throwback with its own Blitz Collect engine |
| 12 | Fruity Blitz | 2024 | — | Diamond Blitz’s companion title, same Blitz Collect engine |
| 13 | Magic Pearls | 2024 | 300x | An underwater theme with a necklace-collection wild mechanic |
| 14 | Coin Blitz | 2024 | — | A further entry in the Blitz-branded line |
| 15 | Bullseye Blitz | 2024–25 | — | Another Blitz-branded release |
| 16 | Diamonds in the Sky | 2024–25 | — | A gem-themed catalogue entry |
| 17 | Jet Set Bonanza | 2025 | — | A travel-themed bonanza-style slot |
| 18 | Diamond Bonanza | 2025 | — | A further bonanza-line gem theme |
| 19 | Fortune Samba | 2025 | — | A carnival-themed entry in the Fortune naming line |
| 20 | Fortune Panda | 2025 | — | A panda-themed entry in the same Fortune line |
| 21 | Skyfire Riches | 2025 | — | A newer catalogue addition |
| 22 | Divine Forge of Wilds | 2025 | — | Part of the second wave beyond the original launch eight |
| 23 | Pilot Piggy Fiesta | 2025 | — | A slot spin-off of the Pilot Piggy crash-game character |
| 24 | Arizona Smith and the Temple of Riches | 2025 | — | A step-crash title, not a conventional slot |
| 25 | Layla Carter and the Pharaoh’s Gold | 2025 | — | A further step-crash release, Egyptian-themed |
Ranked 6 July 2026 from Comtrade Gaming’s own published games listing. Years are approximate defaults (“—” would apply where genuinely unknown) since CG Games’ own site does not publish individual release dates; ordering reflects launch-wave vs later releases where determinable. Availability and RTP tier vary by casino; always check the in-game paytable. Step-crash titles (Arizona Smith, Layla Carter) are included for completeness of the catalogue list but are not slots in the traditional reel-spin sense and are excluded from the top-10 ranking above. *World Cup Glory is ranked here on specification alone — it is too new for the independent verification our top-10 list requires, so its full write-up lives in the new releases section rather than the top-10 above. Max win figures are the published max multiplier from Comtrade Gaming’s own per-game info sheets where one exists — most CG Games titles don’t publish one, hence the “—” marks; we checked every title in this list rather than guessing.
Casinos with Comtrade Gaming (CG Games) slots
This is the one section on the page we’re deliberately not padding out. CG Games’ confirmed distribution partnerships — Mansion88 and Dafabet (both Asian-market operators), plus a September 2025 Interwetten deal and a July 2025 SOFTSWISS Game Aggregator integration — don’t currently point us to a specific, verifiable UKGC-licensed UK casino brand carrying CG Games slots live in its lobby. Comtrade Gaming’s own site lists the UK among CG Games’ certified markets, and the parent company’s UKGC licence (account 25830) is active, but we couldn’t independently confirm any named UK-facing casino actually running the catalogue at the time of writing.
Rather than list operators we can’t verify, we’re stating that plainly. Checked 6 July 2026 — we’ll populate this table the moment we can confirm a real UKGC-licensed carrier. If you’ve seen CG Games slots live at a UK casino, let us know. 18+, please gamble responsibly, and always verify any operator on the Gambling Commission register before depositing.
Sources & Verification
Primary sources checked 6 July 2026, re-verified and expanded 9 July 2026: the Gambling Commission’s business licence register (account 25830); Comtrade Gaming’s official site, including its About Us page and CG Games catalogue, plus individual game information sheets for RTP, volatility and feature data on every title in the ranked list below. Leadership quotes are drawn from a July 2024 CasinoBeats interview with Steven Valentine; additional catalogue context from VegasSlotsOnline’s independent coverage. Imagery from Comtrade Gaming’s official press assets and documented gameplay captures. Spotted an error? Tell us — corrections are actioned as a priority.
✓ Updated 9 July 2026: added World Cup Glory (confirmed live on comtradegaming.com’s own game catalogue, not previously listed here) with official art and a spec table, the 7bet Finland/Baltics and Canadian Bank Note platform-news items, a screenshot plus certifications/partnerships detail on the wider Comtrade Gaming platform business, per-game spec tables and a max-win column sourced from Comtrade’s own game-info sheets, a pros/cons verdict block, a UK-availability FAQ, corrected “Wild Miner” (was mistakenly “Gem Miner”), converted the hero logo to webp, removed a duplicate breadcrumb schema, and moved the on-page navigation up under the ads module.
Comtrade Gaming FAQs
Who owns Comtrade Gaming?
Comtrade Gaming (legally ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O.) is part of the wider Comtrade Group, a Slovenian/Serbian IT and technology conglomerate founded in 1991. It is not owned by another slot studio or casino operator.
What is CG Games?
CG Games is Comtrade Gaming’s in-house slot content division, launched in February 2024. Comtrade itself is a much older platform and gaming-software business; CG Games is its first move into publishing original slots under its own name.
Is Comtrade Gaming fair, or are its games rigged?
ComTrade Programske Resitve D.O.O. holds an active UKGC licence (account 25830, active since 2015) with a clean regulatory record and independently lab-certified games across the UK, Malta, Romania and Brazil.
What is the best Comtrade Gaming slot?
Sweet Treasures is the catalogue’s most independently covered release and our top pick, with Break the Bank and Wild Miner close behind. Our full ranked ten, with reasoning, is above.
Does Comtrade Gaming have its own signature mechanic?
Not yet a truly original one — the closest is “Blitz Collect”, a progressive-jackpot trigger shared between Diamond Blitz and Fruity Blitz. Most other titles combine standard wilds, free spins and pick-bonus features rather than a proprietary engine.
Why do CG Games slots have more than one RTP?
Like most modern studios, CG Games publishes two or three selectable RTP builds per game and lets the operator choose which one runs live — always check the in-game paytable rather than assume the headline figure.
What are the newest Comtrade Gaming slots?
Divine Forge of Wilds, Fortune Panda and Fortune Samba are among the more recent additions to the catalogue as of mid-2026, alongside continued distribution growth via SOFTSWISS and Interwetten.
Where can I play Comtrade Gaming slots in the UK?
We haven’t been able to independently confirm a named UKGC-licensed UK casino currently carrying CG Games’ slot catalogue live, despite the parent company’s UK licence being active and the UK listed among CG Games’ certified markets — see the casinos section above for the full, honest breakdown rather than a guessed list.
Does Comtrade Gaming make anything besides slots?
Yes — CG Games also publishes crash games (Space Aviator, Crash Soccer, Witch Crash) and a small table-games line, and Comtrade Gaming’s much larger core business is B2B platform and Remote Game Server technology, not game content at all.



