Galaxsys Gaming: The Crash Portfolio, the RTP Story and the Turbo Mines Confusion

Galaxsys is an Armenian fast-games studio that builds crash titles like Rocketon, Maestro and Ninja Crash and sells them to casinos through the Digitain group. It is a different company from Turbo Games, even though both ship a game called Turbo Mines, and that single name clash is responsible for most of the bad information you will find about it online.

Galaxsys was founded in 2021 in Yerevan and is purely a business-to-business supplier: it makes games and licenses them to operators and aggregators, and it never runs a casino of its own. For a studio that young it is unusually visible, with crash and instant titles deployed across hundreds of brands and a growing slots arm bolted on since 2024.

It is also the most misreported studio in the crash space. Aggregator pages routinely place it under the wrong parent company, attach the wrong testing labs to it, and confuse its Turbo Mines with a same-named game from an entirely separate Estonian studio. This profile sorts the verified facts from the repeated errors.


Who actually owns Galaxsys, and why it is not SoftConstruct

How to tell its Turbo Mines from the Turbo Games version

The full crash and instant-games portfolio, with documented returns

Why its RTP is operator-configurable, not a fixed number

Which titles are genuinely verifiable and which only carry the label

Where it is licensed, and which labs actually certify it

The 30-second version

Galaxsys is a 2021 Yerevan studio inside the Digitain group, licensed in the UK and Malta, with crash titles such as Rocketon and Maestro returning roughly 96 to 98 percent. That return is operator-configurable rather than fixed, only some of its games are genuinely player-verifiable, and its Turbo Mines is a completely different product from the better-known Turbo Games title of the same name.

🏢 Who makes Galaxsys games

Galaxsys is a division of the Digitain group, not a SoftConstruct company. This is the single most common ownership error online, and it matters because it determines which licences and which testing labs actually apply. Digitain founder Vardges Vardanyan has described spinning the fast-games section out with its own management, sales and technology teams so that it could operate as a standalone division, and that division became Galaxsys.

The studio is headquartered at 26 Amiryan Street in Yerevan, Armenia, and trades commercially through its Malta entity, Digitain (MT) Limited (company number C 87254). Hayk Sargsyan was appointed chief executive in November 2021. Both Galaxsys and the wider Digitain group sit inside the broader Armenian B2B iGaming ecosystem, which also contains BetConstruct and SoftConstruct, but corporate overlap in one country is not the same as shared ownership.

On scale, the picture is self-reported and should be read as marketing rather than audited fact. The company puts its headcount at somewhere between 51 and 200 staff, and quotes 150-plus operator partners, 170-plus supported currencies, 30-plus languages and a catalogue of roughly 40 to 60 games spanning crash, turbo and instant formats, mines, plinko, dice, bingo and keno, plus slots since around 2024.

📝 For the record: Two near-identical Malta entities, Digitain (MT) Limited and Digitain Asia (MT) Limited, both cite the same registration number (C 87254) and the same MGA licence, with different registered addresses appearing across Galaxsys’s own pages. The naming and address inconsistency is unresolved in public records and is worth treating as an open question rather than a settled corporate fact.

 

 

🔍 The “Turbo Mines” confusion, and how to tell the two apart

Two completely different studios ship a game called Turbo Mines, and the web treats them as one. One is the Galaxsys title released on 9 November 2023; the other comes from Turbo Games, the trading name of the Estonian developer TURBODEV OU, part of Turbo Stars. They share a name and a grid-based mines concept, and almost nothing else.

The practical risk for a player is that the RTP, the licensing and the verification model you read about may belong to the other game entirely. Three clean discriminators settle it every time.

  Galaxsys “Turbo Mines” Turbo Games “Mines” / “Turbo Mines”
Studio Galaxsys (Digitain division) TURBODEV OU / Turbo Stars (Estonia)
Released 9 November 2023 May 2021 (Mines), Sep 2022 (Turbo Mines)
RTP 93% to 98.89% (configurable) Up to roughly 95%
Grid Fixed 5×5 (25 cells), 1 to 24 mines Adjustable grid sizes
Licensing MGA and UKGC (via Digitain) Curacao only
Certification GLI, Gaming Associates iTech Labs, BMM Testlabs
Verification Hash-verifiable (server seed plus client seed) “100% provably fair” marketing, no published verifier

If you only remember three things, remember these:

  • The grid. Galaxsys runs a fixed 5×5 board with 1 to 24 mines. Turbo Games lets you change the grid size. A selectable grid is never the Galaxsys game.
  • The RTP signature. A 98.89% ceiling is Galaxsys. A figure around 95% is Turbo Games. The two ranges barely overlap.
  • The licence. MGA plus UKGC through Digitain means Galaxsys. Curacao only means Turbo Games.

“Two studios make a game called Turbo Mines. Telling them apart comes down to three things: the grid, the ceiling and the licence.”

🔍 Worth noting

The confusion actively pollutes published data. Review pages attach the Galaxsys 98.89% figure to the Turbo Games product and back again, and at least one site runs a page headed “Turbo Mines by Galaxsys” whose body text states the game was developed by Turbo Games. Treat any single Turbo Mines listing as suspect until you have checked the grid, the RTP range and the licence against the discriminators above.

We cover the same clash from the Turbo Games side in our Turbo Games provider profile, and the wider question of whether grid-based mines games are fixed in the house’s favour in our guide to whether Mines is rigged.

 

 

📊 The Galaxsys crash and instant portfolio

Galaxsys’s catalogue centres on fast crash and instant games, with returns that mostly cluster between 96 and 98 percent. Across the whole portfolio the figures stretch from a low of roughly 92% on the skill title Penalty to a high of 99.47% on its Blackjack, but the crash titles are where the studio built its name.

Its flagship crash game, Rocketon, has its own dedicated breakdown on this site; we keep its detailed mechanics, the Half Cash-Out feature and its provably fair model in the full Rocketon game guide. The table below documents the headline figures for the studio’s best-known titles.

Game Type RTP (documented) Theoretical ceiling Notes
Rocketon Crash 96.72% x700,000 Two bet panels, Half Cash-Out, hash-verifiable
Crash Crash 96.72% Operator-capped Classic rising curve, dual bet, hash check
Crasher Crash 98% x700,000 50% cashout, double bet, released June 2023
Maestro Crash Around 97% x700,000 Game of the Year nominee, European iGaming Awards 2026
Tower Rush Turbo / crash 96.12% to 97% deployed (98.50% theoretical) x100, capped near €10,000 Tower-build mechanic, multiple SiGMA awards
Turbo Mines Mines / turbo 93% to 98.89% (configurable) x72,000,000 (marketing) Fixed 5×5 grid, 1 to 24 mines (see disambiguation above)
Ninja Crash Crash / arcade 97% to 99% (commonly cited 98%) x5,000 SiGMA Americas Most Played 2024, not provably fair

Two crash titles named on the studio’s UK licence, Cash Show and Limbo Crash, do not have publicly documented return figures, so they are listed by name only rather than with a number we cannot verify. The theoretical ceilings above also deserve a health warning: figures like 700,000x or 72,000,000x are marketing maxima, and operators routinely cap the real payout far lower, as the Tower Rush 10,000 euro cap shows.

💡 Key insight

A huge theoretical multiplier is the cheapest thing a studio can advertise. What you can actually win is set by the operator’s cash cap and the astronomically small odds of reaching the top of the curve, not by the headline number on the marketing sheet.

If you are weighing one crash game against another, our guide on how to choose a crash game walks through the trade-offs that actually move the needle, from return rate to pace to whether the fairness claim holds up.

⚙️ Configurable RTP: the same game at different return rates

Galaxsys does not ship a single fixed RTP per game; it openly sells operators a choice of return profiles. Its own marketing for titles like Tower Rush states that operators can select an RTP profile aligned with local regulation and portfolio strategy, which is the studio confirming in writing that the number you see depends on the casino, not on the game.

The spread is visible in the deployed figures. Tower Rush carries a theoretical maximum of 98.50% but is commonly run between 96.12% and 97%. Turbo Mines sits anywhere in a 93% to 98.89% band depending on the operator. The practical lesson is to read the in-game information panel for the actual figure in front of you, because the marketing ceiling is rarely what your casino has switched on.

📝 For the record: Galaxsys does not publish a public tier table showing exactly which percentage each profile corresponds to. Available configurations are quoted privately to operators on request. That is a genuine transparency gap, and it means no third party can tell you with certainty which tier a given casino has chosen.

This makes Galaxsys a textbook case of the operator-configurable RTP model rather than an exception to it. We explain the mechanism, the incentives behind it and how to check your own game in our dedicated guide to operator-configurable RTP.

🛡️ Are Galaxsys games provably fair?

Some are genuinely verifiable and some only carry the label, so the honest answer is “it depends on the title.” Galaxsys markets provable fairness and a hash-code system at the studio level, and it pairs that with certified random number generation and a quantum entropy source. But a marketing badge applied to a whole catalogue is not the same as a working verifier on the specific game you are playing.

  • Genuinely hash-verifiable. Rocketon, Crash, Tower Rush and Turbo Mines expose an in-client verification panel: a pre-committed hash, then post-round seeds you can run through a checker yourself.
  • Certified RNG only. Ninja Crash carries no pre-round hash, so individual rounds cannot be independently checked despite the studio-wide provably fair branding.

There is one more distinction worth keeping straight. Galaxsys advertises use of a quantum random number generator supplied by ID Quantique, a Swiss firm that specialises in quantum-grade randomness. That speaks to the quality of the randomness source, which is a real engineering point, but it says nothing about whether you, the player, can verify a result after the fact. Source quality and player verifiability are two separate questions.

🔍 Worth noting

Galaxsys runs no single public seed-verifier portal. Verification, where it exists, is per-game and inside the client. So a blanket “provably fair” label on a Galaxsys game is a prompt to check, not a guarantee. If a title shows you a pre-round hash and post-round seeds, you can trust the round; if it does not, you are relying on certification alone.

 

 

🏆 Licensing and certification

Galaxsys is properly licensed in two of the strictest jurisdictions in the industry, which is unusual for a fast-games studio of its age. Both licences are held by the commercial entity Digitain (MT) Limited and verify against the official registers.

  • Malta Gaming Authority. Critical Gaming Supply licence MGA/B2B/592/2018, issued 29 January 2020, held by Digitain (MT) Limited.
  • UK Gambling Commission. Account 63601, with the register listing three trading names: Digitain, Galaxsys and Imagine Live. Named Galaxsys titles under the UK licence include Cash Show, Blackjack, Crash, Penalty, Rocketon, Golden RA, Crasher and Plinkoman.
  • Wider coverage. Additional licences and recognitions span Romania, Greece, Curacao, Sweden, Peru and, from February 2026, the Isle of Man, plus certifications across several other European and Latin American markets.

The certification record is where most third-party profiles go wrong. Galaxsys’s official compliance materials name only GLI (Gaming Laboratories International) and Gaming Associates as its testing bodies, including GLI-19 certification for several titles.

🔍 Worth noting

Several aggregator profiles claim Galaxsys is certified by iTech Labs and BMM Testlabs. Neither lab appears on any official Galaxsys or Digitain compliance material, and both are the labs associated with the rival Turbo Games studio. Treat any iTech Labs or BMM Testlabs claim for Galaxsys as unverified and most likely a cross-contaminated copy of Turbo Games’ details, which is the same name-clash error that drives the Turbo Mines confusion.

📈 Distribution, deals and awards

For a 2021 studio, Galaxsys has scaled its distribution fast. Its games reach the market through direct operator deals and the major aggregators, and the format it specialises in, quick-fire crash and instant games, is one of the fastest-growing corners of online gambling.

The headline distribution move was joining the SOFTSWISS Game Aggregator in October 2024, which put its catalogue in front of more than a thousand operator brands in one step. It also distributes through SoftGamings, EveryMatrix, QTech Games, Relax Gaming, Gamingtec, Reevo and Digitain’s own aggregator, with operator integrations announced through 2024 to 2026 including Fortune Coins and Blazesoft, Cloudbet, 1xBet, NetBet and Adjarabet.

The same speed and constant availability that make these games spread so quickly are also what make them riskier to play. We cover the research evidence, the risk factors and what regulators are doing in a dedicated guide: crash gambling and player harm.

The awards shelf has filled up just as quickly. Galaxsys has taken SiGMA Europe’s Fast Games Provider of the Year, SiGMA Eurasia’s Industry Rising Star in 2023 and Best New Game in 2025 for Tower Rush, SiGMA Americas’ Most Played Game 2024 for Ninja Crash, and SiGMA Africa’s Best Crash Game 2025, again for Tower Rush. It was shortlisted at the EGR B2B Awards 2025 in the crash-games category, and Maestro is nominated for Game of the Year at the European iGaming Awards 2026.

📝 For the record: Tower Rush’s release date is itself contested. Galaxsys’s own game page lists 28 February 2024, while several trade reports point to a SiGMA Europe premiere and broad commercial release in late 2024. The most likely reconciliation is an early-2024 soft launch followed by a wider rollout later that year.

❓ Frequently asked questions

Who owns Galaxsys?

Galaxsys is a division of the Digitain group, created out of Digitain’s fast-games operation by founder Vardges Vardanyan. Its commercial and legal entity is the Malta-registered Digitain (MT) Limited. It is not a SoftConstruct company, despite both sitting inside the wider Armenian iGaming ecosystem.

Is Galaxsys licensed by the UK Gambling Commission?

Yes. Galaxsys games are supplied under Digitain (MT) Limited’s UK Gambling Commission licence, account number 63601, where “Galaxsys” is registered as an active trading name alongside Digitain and Imagine Live. It also holds a Malta Gaming Authority B2B licence and recognitions across several other regulated markets.

What is the difference between Galaxsys and Turbo Games “Turbo Mines”?

They are two different games from two different studios that happen to share a name. The Galaxsys version runs a fixed 5×5 grid, a configurable 93% to 98.89% RTP and MGA plus UKGC licensing. The Turbo Games version uses adjustable grids, an RTP around 95% and Curacao-only licensing. Check the grid, the RTP signature and the licence to tell which one you are playing.

Are Galaxsys games provably fair?

Only some of them. Rocketon, Crash, Tower Rush and Turbo Mines expose an in-client hash and seed check you can verify yourself, so those are genuinely verifiable. Others, such as Ninja Crash, carry no pre-round hash and are certified RNG only. The studio-wide “provably fair” branding is a prompt to check each title rather than a blanket guarantee.

What RTP do Galaxsys crash games have?

Most Galaxsys crash titles sit between roughly 96% and 98%, with Rocketon and Crash both documented at 96.72% and Crasher at 98%. Because the studio sells operator-configurable RTP profiles, the exact figure depends on your casino, so always check the in-game information panel for the number that applies to your session.

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