Moozi Lawsuit Claims Online Casino’s Gambling Operations Are Illegal in Alabama
by Chloe Gocher
Hurst v. Moshy Gaming LLC d/b/a Moozi Casino
Filed: July 3, 2025 ◆§ 3:25cv491
A class action lawsuit against Moozi Casino claims that it illegally operates online gambling services in Alabama.
A proposed class action lawsuit claims that Moozi Casino’s online gambling operations are unlawful in Alabama, given that players must use real money to buy the company’s virtual currencies.
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The 25-page lawsuit says that although Alabama law mandates that gambling games may be offered only by licensed operators at approved physical locations, Moozi Casino “flout[s] these legal requirements” by providing unlicensed gambling services online to state residents.
According to the class action lawsuit, Moozi Casino markets itself as a “social casino” in an effort to “evade regulatory scrutiny and mislead consumers,” falsely assuring that its platform offers “benign, entertainment-only gameplay.” The filing alleges that Moozi Casino “operates in a manner virtually indistinguishable from a traditional online casino.”
The case explains that Moozi Casino games are played with the platform’s proprietary virtual currencies, “Gold Coins” and “Sweeps Coins.” Per the lawsuit, Moozi Casino derives its revenue mostly through the sale of these in-game currencies, using the sale of Gold Coins as a vehicle for the sale of the Sweeps Coins used by players to wager.
Though Gold Coins on the Moozi platform are offered with promotional bonuses, they are marketed by the defendant as having no real-world monetary value, the case states. However, Moozi typically “bundle[s]” the purchase of Gold Coins with Sweeps Coins, which in fact carry real-world monetary value, the lawsuit stresses.
“The only accepted payment method on Moozi Casino is bank transfers,” the case reads. “In effect, players are wagering a valuable currency (Sweeps Coins) on games of chance in order to obtain prizes of greater value—a textbook definition of gambling.”
As the case tells it, Moozi Casino’s reliance on the sale of virtual currencies makes clear that “the platform’s true aim is to facilitate and profit from the sale of Sweeps Coins.”
“In sum, the games of chance offered by Moozi Casino—including slots, blackjack, and roulette—constitute gambling,” the case contends. “These games are functionally identical to those offered in traditional casinos such as those in Las Vegas.”
The Moozi Casino class action lawsuit seeks to represent all Alabama residents who played and lost money wagering on any of Moozi’s online casino games within the applicable statute of limitations period.
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