Liberia: Choplife Gaming secures license to launch online sports betting and casino operations

Choplife Gaming, a pan-African digital entertainment and gaming group, has secured a license to operate online sports betting and casino services in Liberia, marking its official entry into the Liberian market. This authorization expands Choplife Gaming’s licensed presence to nine African countries, reinforcing its position as a growing African-owned player in the continent’s digital gaming sector.
Pan-African operations and market presence
Choplife Gaming operates its proprietary brand Chopwin in Gambia (chopwin.gm) and Sierra Leone (chopwin.sl) and represents the betPawa brand in Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, and Benin. The Liberian license further strengthens the group’s regional footprint and operational reach.
Leadership Statement
Oluwatosin Ajibade alias “Sir Eazi”, Chairman of Choplife Gaming, commented: “Our expansion into Liberia reflects our commitment to delivering secure, mobile-first, and locally relevant gaming experiences across Africa. We look forward to working with local partners to support job creation, digital inclusion, and access to high-quality gaming entertainment.”
Products and Platform
Liberian players will have access to a fully licensed online sportsbook and casino platform, including sports betting, slots, crash games, virtual sports, and instant-win products. The platform is designed for mobile usage, mobile money payments, and low-data environments to ensure broad accessibility.

Responsible Gaming and Local Engagement
Choplife Gaming will implement responsible gaming initiatives and compliance-driven operations in line with regulatory requirements. The company also plans to roll out local training programs, awareness campaigns, and community-focused initiatives aimed at supporting sustainable industry growth and youth empowerment.
About Choplife Gaming
Choplife Gaming is a pan-African digital entertainment company operating licensed sports betting and casino platforms across nine African markets. Through a mobile-first approach and a focus on responsible gaming, the group delivers locally adapted digital entertainment experiences under both proprietary and partner brands.




Interesting move for Liberia, but I hope the regulator keeps a tight grip on responsible gaming once the flashy products roll out. Mobile-first and low-data support makes sense, though it also means it’ll reach a lot of young people fast, so the promised education campaigns need to be real. I tried a couple of crash-game app lists when I was checking what these platforms usually offer, and https://high-flyer-game.com/apps/ was one of them, while https://play-vortex-game.com/apps/ showed up in the same rabbit hole . If Choplife is serious about jobs and training locally, that part could be the best outcome here.