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RNS Number : 8134E  Winvia Entertainment PLC  19 May 2026

 

19 May 2026

 

Winvia Entertainment PLC

("Winvia Entertainment", the "Group" or the "Company")

 

Final results for the year ending 31 December 2025

 

Adjusted EBITDA in line with recently upgraded expectations

 

Continued strong trading in Q1 FY26

 

Winvia Entertainment (AIM: WVIA), a technology-led entertainment business,
focused on prize draw competitions and online gaming, today announces its
final results for the year ending 31 December 2025.

 

Financial highlights(1)

 

 ·             Net revenue increased to £170.3 million (FY24: £38.1 million)
 ·             Adjusted EBITDA(2) increased to £31.2 million (FY24: £6.6 million) in line
               with recently upgraded expectations
 ·             Statutory profit from operations increased to £12.0 million (FY24: £5.9
               million)
 ·             Net cash/(debt)(3) increased to £29.9 million (FY24: (£36.6 million))
 ·             Dividend of 5.9 pence per share recommended by the Directors, in line with
               expectations set at time of IPO

 

FY25 KPIs

 

Prize Draw Competitions(4)

 

                            FY25  FY24  % increase
 Active customers(6)        1.7m  0.9m  +94%
 New user registrations(7)  1.5m  0.9m  +74%
 First time players(8)      1.2m  0.6m  +113%

 

Online Gaming(5)

 

                            FY25  FY24  % increase
 Active customers(6)        1.5m  1.4m  +10%
 New user registrations(7)  2.0m  1.8m  +12%
 First time depositors(8)   0.4m  0.4m  -

 

 

Operational highlights

 

 ·             Prize Draw Competitions
               −              Active customers up 94% year-on-year, driven by M&A, higher marketing
                              spend, streamlined onboarding, ongoing platform migration and enhanced prize
                              offerings. This delivered record peak-season player numbers and strong
                              momentum into FY26.
               −              Launched subscription option (BOTB Pass) in H2 FY25, which has materially
                              exceeded management's expectations, reaching 9% of BOTB monthly revenue by 31
                              December 2025. Subscription cohort unit economics are tracking firmly ahead of
                              initial assumptions with retention strengthening across each successive
                              cohort.
               −              Continued investment in unique features across all aspects of the user journey
                              (from acquisition to retention and reactivation) resulting in increase of
                              related KPIs.

 

 ·             Online Gaming
               −              Introduced a new revenue stream, through three new B2B partnerships, which now
                              accounts for over a quarter of deposits as of 31 March 2026, surpassing the
                              contribution from white labels in under a year.
               −              Launched features and improvements to help drive further margin enhancement.
               −              Successfully mitigated the increase in Romanian gaming tax introduced during
                              2025.

 

 ·             Technology platform
               −              Integration and development of dedicated AI tools to support rapid scale
                              opportunity across Own/B2B/B2B2C channels and future M&A integration.

 

M&A

 

 ·             On 18 May 2026, the Group announced it had entered into an asset purchase
               agreement to acquire the trade, business and assets (excluding any
               liabilities, cash and trade receivables) of Rev Corp Limited, trading as Rev
               Comps. The acquisition is expected to be earnings enhancing in the first full
               financial year following completion and is aligned to the Company's strategy
               to build a leading position in the UK prize draw market.
 ·             The Group continues to engage with a number of exciting potential acquisition
               targets in the UK prize draw sector, building a strong pipeline of M&A
               opportunities within a fragmented market.

 

Current trading and outlook

 

 ·             Trading in the first quarter of FY26 has continued to be strong and the Group
               is firmly on track to meet the Board's full year expectations.
 ·             Monthly recurring revenues from Prize Draw Competitions subscriptions continue
               to accelerate and, as of 31 March 2026, now contribute in excess of 20% of
               monthly BOTB revenue, ahead of plan.
 ·             As we head into a peak trading period, we see a significant opportunity to
               increase our market share which we intend to capitalise on.
 ·             The Board is confident on Winvia's ability to deliver sustainable growth,
               supported by its scalable technology platform, strong cash generation and
               strong pipeline of M&A opportunities within a fragmented UK prize draw
               market.

 

 

Mihai Manoila, Chief Executive Officer, commented:

 

"2025 has been a transformational year for Winvia, marked by strong execution,
further scale and the demonstration of our agility, delivering on
opportunities that capture further revenue in a growing market. We have driven
significant revenue and EBITDA growth, expanded our customer base across both
Prize Draw Competitions and Online Gaming, and demonstrated the power of our
proprietary technology platform to deliver scalable, high-margin growth.
Additionally, we have seen early success in our subscription model.

 

"We have carried this strong momentum into 2026, which gives us confidence in
our ability to further increase recurring revenues and market share. With a
robust balance sheet, a clear consolidation opportunity in the fragmented UK
prize draw market, and continued investment in technology and AI, we are well
positioned to deliver sustainable long-term value for shareholders."

 

 

Notes:

1.     Prior year statutory accounts only included 20 days of the Online
Gaming segment given the Group came together on 11 December 2025.

2.     Adjusted EBITDA is defined as operating profit adjusted for foreign
currency gains and losses, depreciation and amortisation, and adjusting items.

3.     Net cash / (debt) is defined as cash balances available to the
Group, excluding restricted balances, net of third-party debt provided to the
Group.

4.     Figures for FY25 include both Best of the Best ("BOTB") and Click
Competitions ("Click").  In FY24, the figures only included BOTB.

5.     Above figures represent own brand and white label activity, or B2C
activity only.

6.     Active customers are defined as any customer who purchases a ticket
in a prize draw competition or places a stake in any game operated in the
online gaming segment.

7.     New user registrations are defined as any new customer registering
onto any website operated by the Group across both business verticals during
the year.

8.     First time players/depositors are defined as any player who
purchases their first ticket in a prize draw competition or makes their first
deposit into their online gaming account during the year.

 

All figures, including percentage movements, are subject to rounding

 

 

Contacts:

 

 Winvia Entertainment                                  https://winvia.co.uk/
                                                       (https://protect.checkpoint.com/v2/r02/___https:/winvia.co.uk/___.YXAxZTpzaG9yZWNhcDpjOm86ODBhNjgxMDA0NjA5YTE1ZTFkNmQxYWU3NDRjNDNkYjU6NzoyNmI2OjAxZmU0Zjc1YjJkZGE5YWQwOWNjNGIwYThkNmY1MDQ5MDNlODlhZDFlMWZmYjE4YjliMzJiMWM1MTBkMDUwOTk6cDpUOk4)
 Mihai Manoila, Chief Executive Officer                c/o Alma
 Simon Hay, Chief Financial Officer
 Shore Capital (Nominated Adviser & Broker)            +44 (0) 20 7408 4090

 Patrick Castle / Tom Knibbs / Sophie Collins
 Alma Strategic Communications                         +44 (0) 20 3405 0205

 Rebecca Sanders-Hewett / Sam Modlin / Rose Docherty   winvia@almastrategic.com

 

About Winvia Entertainment

 

Winvia Entertainment plc (AIM: WVIA) is a technology-led entertainment
business, focused on two discrete fast-growing channels, being the large and
highly fragmented Prize Draw Competition market in the UK, and Online Gaming
in the regulated Romanian market. Underpinning both channels is the
proprietary technology platform, which has a track-record of supporting growth
and operational improvement.

 

Winvia Entertainment is the second largest (by market share) prize draw
operator in the UK (London Economics report for the Department for Media,
Culture and Sport, June 2025) where players play for a range of prizes
including cars, luxury watches, holidays, gadgets, properties and other items.
The Group currently owns two prize draw brands, Best of the Best and Click
Competitions.

 

The Group's Online Gaming business is well established, growing, profitable
and highly cash generative. The Group operates a multi-brand strategy
including own brands, such as Princess Casino, Royal Slots and Luck, a number
of white label brands and several B2B partnerships.

 

The Group's newly built innovative proprietary technology platform is a key
strength of the business. It has been built in-house, with significant
investment and its application to date has significantly improved key
performance metrics.

 

The Group's near-term growth plans are primarily focused on the highly
fragmented, fast-growing Prize Draw Competitions market in which there are
strong organic growth opportunities in addition to a strong pipeline of
potential acquisitions that can leverage the technology platform.

 

Chair Statement

 

I am pleased to present Winvia's first set of results since admission to
trading on AIM in November 2025. The Board is delighted with the Group's
performance, which demonstrates the strength of our business model and the
progress we have made in executing our strategic plan.

 

During the year, Winvia successfully completed an oversubscribed AIM IPO,
raising £40 million of gross proceeds, which provides a strong capital
foundation to support both organic growth and strategic acquisitions in the UK
prize draw market. This was an important milestone in the Group's development
and reflects strong investor confidence in our technology led entertainment
platform and growth prospects.

 

Delivering ahead of plan

 

The Directors are pleased to report strong revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth,
with adjusted EBITDA in line with the recently upgraded market expectations,
underscoring the profitability and scalability of our operations. We have
delivered robust operating cash flow and finished the year with a healthy net
cash position, providing financial flexibility as we continue to invest in
long-term value creation.

 

In line with expectations set at the time of the IPO, the Board has proposed a
dividend of 5.9 pence per share with these results, reflecting our commitment
to delivering shareholder returns. While mindful of prudent capital allocation
and future growth opportunities, we believe this reflects our strong
performance and confidence in continued progress.

 

Well positioned to address a significant market opportunity in UK prize draw

 

The UK prize draw market represents a large, fast‑growing and structurally
under‑developed opportunity, supported by strong and sustained consumer
engagement. Around 7.4 million UK adults participate in paid online prize
draws and competitions each year, with the sector valued at approximately
£1.3bn annually and comprising a highly fragmented landscape of over 400
operators. Engagement is both frequent and mainstream, with 8% of adults
spending money to enter an online draw for major prizes within a four‑week
period.

 

Despite this scale, the market remains under‑digitised, presenting a clear
opening for operators with advanced technology, data capability and brand
strength to consolidate share. Rising digital participation, mobile‑first
behaviour and a structural shift towards subscription‑based products are
supporting long‑term growth in the segment.

 

With its scalable proprietary technology platform, strong brand recognition,
growing customer base, and increasing use of AI‑driven tools and data
analytics, Winvia is well positioned to capture this opportunity, driving
enhanced conversion, retention and recurring revenue expansion.

 

The Group welcomes the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport's
comprehensive market study and subsequent Voluntary Code of Good Practice for
Prize Draw Operators (the "Voluntary Code"). The Group is pleased to be a
signatory to the Voluntary Code, which supports higher standards of
transparency, consistency and player protection, while providing greater
clarity and supporting confidence in the market's continued development. While
the Board views this as a positive step forward for the sector, there may be
short-term challenges within the market as those that do comply with the
Voluntary Code compete against those that choose not to comply.

 

Strengthening the leadership team

 

As announced, David Perry, having played a key role in the Group's IPO,
stepped down from the Board on 1 February 2026 to pursue his next project.
Simon Hay, Chief Commercial Officer since joining the Group in November 2025,
joined the Board as CFO on the same date. Simon brings over 25 years of
strategic and commercial finance experience in gaming, travel, and leisure,
previously serving as CFO at Pawatech Group Limited and Interim CFO at Rank
Group PLC.

 

Confidence looking to the future

 

I would like to thank our shareholders, colleagues and partners for their
support as we have executed the first stage of our strategic plan. The Group
has had a strong start to 2026, highlighting its resilience in uncertain
macroeconomic times. Looking ahead, the Board remains confident in the Group's
ability to build on this solid foundation and to deliver sustainable growth
across both our core segments - Prize Draw Competitions and Online Gaming.

 

 

CEO Statement

 

I am proud to report that 2025 has been a transformational year for Winvia
Entertainment plc, with significant progress on operational, financial and
strategic fronts.

 

The year was characterised by strong execution, accelerated growth and
excellent operational momentum, which we are seeing continuing into FY26.
Building on this performance, we are focused on delivering on our strategic
priorities - scaling our technology-driven platform, expanding our customer
base, enhancing recurring revenues, and selectively executing on inorganic
opportunities in the UK prize draw market, to drive value for shareholders.

 

Revenue grew to £170.3 million, with adjusted EBITDA increasing to £31.2
million, exceeding the previous year's results and exceeding our expectations
at the time of our IPO in November. The Group consistently generates strong
operating cash flows, contributing to an increasingly healthy net cash
position at year-end.

 

Prize Draw Competitions: Delivering significant growth in the UK prize draw
market

 

                              FY25  FY24  % increase
 Active customers(1,2)        1.7m  0.9m  +94%
 New user registrations(1,3)  1.5m  0.9m  +74%
 First time players(1,4)      1.2m  0.6m  +113%

 

1.     Figures for FY25 include both Best of the Best ("BOTB") and Click
Competitions ("Click").  In FY24, the figures only included BOTB.

2.     Active customers are defined as any customer who purchases a ticket
in a prize draw competition.

3.     New user registrations are defined as any new customer registering
onto any website operated by the Group during the year.

4.     First time players are defined as any player who purchases their
first ticket in a prize draw competition.

 

FY25 marked a strong year for the Prize Draw Competitions business, with
active customers increasing by 94% year on year, driven by the impact of
M&A, greater marketing spend, streamlined onboarding, ongoing migration
onto the technology platform and enhanced prize offerings. Alongside this,
further products were launched and customer experience was further enhanced.
This culminated in record player numbers in the peak season and positive
momentum heading into FY26.

 

The subscription option, BOTB Pass, launched in the second half of the year,
quickly exceeded management's projections with strong adoption, and at
year-end represented a meaningful share of total revenues, at 9% of BOTB
monthly revenue in December 2025. As we progress into FY26, with the continued
growth of BOTB Pass, subscription revenues now represent 20% of BOTB revenues
in the first quarter to 31 March 2026. This level of adoption and above
industry standard retention demonstrates significant market traction and
product-market fit, with BOTB launching a completely different model of
subscription with real USPs and differentiators.

 

With the lifetime value of a subscriber being more than five times the value
of a non-subscriber, the subscription model has become a key driver of
long-term revenue and plans are underway to further cultivate this income
source through targeted marketing, expansion of market share and customer
lifetime value. Naturally, as customers shift to recurring membership products
from transactional purchases, the average transaction value of
non-subscription purchases may moderate in the short term as more customers
convert to the subscription model, however, we believe this is more than
offset by the significant increase in the customer lifetime value. Through
continued customer acquisition and engagement initiatives, which have resulted
in the Group being the number one brand in terms of social media presence in
the prize draw space with over 500 million organic views, according to Social
Blade, there has been no significant impact on total revenues, while
benefiting from improved revenue visibility and customer retention.

 

Online Gaming: Continued growth with new revenue opportunity delivering

 

                            FY25  FY24  % increase
 Active customers(1)        1.5m  1.4m  +10%
 New user registrations(2)  2.0m  1.8m  +12%
 First time depositors(3)   0.4m  0.4m  -

 

1.     Active customers are defined as any customer who places a stake in
any game operated in the Online Gaming segment.

2.     New user registrations are defined as any new customer registering
onto any website operated by the Group during the year.

3.     First time depositors are defined as any player who makes their
first deposit into their online gaming account during the year.

 

The Online Gaming segment demonstrated a strong performance in FY25, despite
changes in the legislative landscape, which the Group mitigated in its
entirety. The number of active customers increased by 10% year on year,
continuing the double-digit growth trend established in the previous period.
December 2025 marked a record high for deposits, rising 16% compared to
December 2024. This growth is attributable to the Group's ability to acquire
customers at a lower rate than the market via our technology and know-how,
enhanced player engagement and successful product improvements implemented
throughout the year, providing positive momentum as the Company transitions
into 2026.

 

The launch of three new B2B partnerships this year contributed to revenue
growth, established an additional revenue stream, and demonstrated the
scalability of the Group's technology platform. B2B customer deposits for the
month of December 2025 were 24% of the total value of deposits transacted
through the platform, generating a high-margin and recurring revenue streams,
with this increasing to 26% by 31 March 2026. The initial achievements of
these collaborations reinforce our confidence in the continued expansion of
this revenue stream. Importantly, these partnerships were launched with
minimal incremental operational cost, demonstrating the significant operating
leverage of the Group's proprietary technology platform. As of December 2025,
the external platform revenues more than offset the monthly internal platform
development costs.

 

While there is a significant opportunity with this revenue stream, the current
focus of the Group is on expanding deployments within the Prize Draw
Competitions segment, where management believes the commercial opportunity is
particularly significant and 'once in a lifetime'. Over time, the continued
development of this platform capability may represent an increasingly
meaningful strategic component of the Group's overall business model,
benefiting from a capital-light and incrementally scalable operating
structure. As adoption expands, the platform is gradually evolving beyond an
internal technology stack into a broader ecosystem supporting multiple
partners and brands within the Group's operating verticals.

 

Enhancing our technology platform

 

Winvia's technology platform is central to the Group's strategy and underpins
growth across all operating segments. The Group continues to invest in a
proprietary, scalable and modular platform designed to support high
transaction volumes, rapid product innovation and efficient customer
acquisition, while meeting stringent regulatory and compliance requirements.

 

The strategy is to leverage the platform both to enhance the performance of
Winvia's own consumer-facing brands and to monetise the technology through B2B
partnerships, creating a diversified and capital-light revenue stream.

 

The Group operates in markets where technology, data and speed of execution
are increasingly critical competitive differentiators. Winvia's platform
enables the rapid testing and deployment of new products, prize formats and
engagement mechanics, allowing the Group to respond quickly to customer
preferences and market trends.

 

Alongside fuelling our growth, the growing demand from third-party operators
for reliable, compliant and flexible technology solutions presents a
significant opportunity for B2B expansion across both segments. As the
platform scales, incremental revenues can be generated at attractive margins,
enhancing overall Group profitability and return on capital.

 

As our own proprietary product and technology sits at the core of our
operations, we began a structured programme in 2025 to carefully deploy AI
tools and enhancements across both the technology stack and day-to-day
operations. We have created and started to implement a roadmap across
departments, identifying the needs and potential solutions that could increase
efficiency and quality of the operations. By doing this, we have identified
key areas in departments such as data analytics, marketing/user acquisition,
CRM, legal and product development where either we have built our own
AI-driven tech stack or agents, or we have implemented external tools. This
has accelerated and enhanced capabilities and human skills in each of the
mentioned departments by having a faster and more qualitative/data-based
delivery of their responsibilities.

 

The Group is also shifting slowly towards AI-driven development of the
technology, which will further enhance our capabilities during the course of
2026. We have developed our proprietary AI software changes last year in a
limited context, while ensuring a smooth transition to AI development of new
features.

 

Strong M&A pipeline

 

On 18 May 2026, the Group announced it had entered into an asset purchase
agreement to acquire the trade, business and assets (excluding any
liabilities, cash and trade receivables) of Rev Corp Limited, trading as Rev
Comps. The acquisition is expected to be earnings enhancing in the first full
financial year following completion and is aligned to the Company's strategy
to build a leading position in the UK prize draw market.

 

The Group continues to engage with a number of exciting potential acquisition
targets in the UK prize draw sector, building a strong pipeline of M&A
opportunities within a fragmented market.

 

Building a stronger team for the future

 

Following the year-end, Simon Hay was promoted to the role of CFO following
his tenure as CCO. Simon's extensive experience in the sector, in addition to
his understanding of the business and its operations, will be invaluable as we
execute our strategy set out at IPO. This appointment strengthens our
leadership team, and we look forward to working with him to continue to drive
the business at pace.

 

Dividend

 

In line with the Group's stated dividend policy, the Board has proposed a
maiden dividend of 5.9 pence per share, payable on 1 July 2026 to shareholders
on the register at 5 June 2026, subject to shareholder approval.

 

Outlook

 

Trading in the first quarter of 2026 has continued to be strong and the Group
is firmly on track to meet the Board's full year expectations, with net
revenue as at 31 March 2026 ahead of the same period last year. Additionally,
monthly recurring revenues from subscriptions is continuing to accelerate, and
as of 31 March 2026, now contribute in excess of 20% of monthly revenue, ahead
of plan.

 

As we head into a peak trading period, we see a significant opportunity to
increase our market share and intend to capitalise on the scale of the
opportunities ahead. The Board remains confident in Winvia's ability to
deliver sustainable growth, supported by its scalable technology platform,
strong cash generation and strong pipeline of opportunities within a
fragmented UK prize draw market.

 

Financial Review

 

Winvia has delivered a strong revenue and adjusted EBITDA performance in 2025,
building on the legacy of its two operating segments: Prize Draw Competitions
and Online Gaming. Both segments contribute to Winvia's growth strategy,
through a combination of organic growth and targeted acquisitions.

 

Targeted acquisitions in the UK prize draw market remain core to the growth
strategy; to act as a consolidator in this substantial, fast-growing and
fragmented market. This was evident in the Group's acquisition of Click
Competitions in April 2025, which since year end has been migrated onto the
Group's proprietary technology platform, and the recently announced
acquisition of Rev Comps, and we continue to explore further acquisition
opportunities. With our first subscription model launched in July 2025, the
BOTB Pass, the Group has demonstrated its ability to deliver unique and
differentiated opportunities for our customers to engage with the business.

 

In the Online Gaming segment, the Group has expanded its avenues to market in
2025, marking its first steps into the growing B2B channel. In August 2025,
the Group opened the proprietary 360 platform to third-party operators,
establishing a new revenue stream in the online gaming market in Romania.

 

This growth in performance has been enabled by the Group's continued
investment in its proprietary technology, totalling £2.3m during the year.
With further investment to enhance the mobile app customer experience, as well
as automating marketing processes and data analytics, we continue to look at
all opportunities to drive customer engagement.

 

Performance

 

                         2025   2024

                         £'m    £'m
 Revenue                 170.3  38.1
 Gross profit            95.8   28.9
 Profit from operations  12.0   5.9
 Adjusting items         13.5   0.5
 Adjusted EBITDA         31.2   6.6

 

All performance analysis discussed below is on a statutory basis and,
therefore, contains only 20 days of trading of the Online Gaming segment in
2024.

 

Group revenue increased to £170.3m (2024: £38.1m), driven by growth in both
operating segments, particularly the Online Gaming segment, despite the
increase in gaming duty enacted in Romania in the second half of the year, and
the addition of Click Competitions in the Prize Draw Competitions segment.

 

Adjusted EBITDA rose to £31.2m (2024: £6.6m). The Directors consider
adjusted EBITDA as the most appropriate performance measure, which is taken
after foreign currency gains and losses, depreciation and amortisation and
adjusting items. Adjusted EBITDA margin improved in 2025 demonstrating the
Group's operational leverage.

 

Adjusting items relate primarily to the Group's listing on AIM, and
reorganisation costs, which completed in November 2025. While part of the
costs incurred have been recorded against the share premium account on the
balance sheet, in accordance with accounting principles, £12.4m has been
charged to the profit and loss ("P&L") during the year.

 

Profit from operations rose to £12.0m (2024: £5.9m) as a result of the
increase in revenue delivering growth to the bottom line.

 

Prize Draw Competitions

 

                  2025   2024

                  £'m    £'m
 Revenue          40.3   28.8
 Adjusted EBITDA  9.6    4.0

 

 

The Prize Draw Competitions segment has delivered positive growth in 2025, on
the back of increasing investment in the number of weekly competitions, prizes
and marketing expenditure. Along with the launch of the BOTB Pass in July
2025, the Group has achieved record engagement, by way of active customers,
new user registrations and first-time players, setting the Group on a strong
footing going into 2026. The acquisition of Click Competitions in April 2025
has also contributed positively to the segment results.

 

Online gaming

 

                  2025   2024(1)

£'m
                  £'m
 Revenue          130.0  9.3
 Adjusted EBITDA  24.9   2.6

 

 

1.  2024 contains only 20 days of the Online Gaming segment.

 

In the Online Gaming segment, through proactive measures taken to manage
marketing costs and engagement with customers following the decision by the
Romanian gaming regulator to increase gaming duty from 21% to 30% in August
2025, the Group has delivered exceptional year on year growth. With investment
in its own casino brands, growth in its white label brands and introduction of
the B2B offering, the resulting growth in active customers and new user
registrations has supported a record year.

 

Corporate

 

Following its listing on AIM in November 2025, the Directors made the decision
to separately report a Corporate segment, reflecting the costs associated with
operating in a listed environment. In 2025, these costs totalled £3.3m (2024:
£nil).

 

Cash flow and Balance sheet

 

                           2025    2024

                           £'m     £'m
 Total assets              121.3   52.3
 Total liabilities         (86.0)  (88.6)
 Net assets/(liabilities)  35.3    (36.3)

 

                                                         2025   2024

                                                         £'m    £'m
 Net cash generated from/(used in) operating activities  15.7   (2.9)
 Net cash used in investing activities                   (9.4)  (14.6)
 Net cash generated from financing activities            36.1   29.2
 Net increase in cash and cash equivalents               42.4   11.8
 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year          20.1   8.4
 Effect of foreign exchange                              0.5    -
 Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                63.0   20.1

 

The Group's cash balance increased by £42.9m in 2025, reaching £63.0m by
year-end. The Group's trading performance delivered net cash from operating
activities of £15.7m in 2025 (2024: (£2.9m)), while £38.5m in net proceeds
were raised from the IPO.

 

The Group invested £6.1m, net of cash acquired, in April 2025, to acquire
Click Competitions, with a further £5.6m in deferred consideration on the
balance sheet.

 

Further, the Group capitalised £2.3m in relation to the continued development
and enhancement of its proprietary technology platform. This investment in the
integration and development of dedicated AI tools supports the rapid scale
opportunity across Own/B2B/B2B2C channels and future M&A integration onto
the proprietary technology platform.

 

Prior to the IPO, the Group agreed amendments to its bank facilities, which
are repayable in full by 2030.  In addition, £25.2m of related party debt
was converted to equity.

 

At 31 December 2025, the Group has net assets of £35.3m (2024: net
liabilities of £36.3m), including net cash of £29.9m (2024: net debt
£36.6m).

 

However, £47.6m of the negative balance in Other reserves on the balance
sheet represents the difference between the cost of investment and the
carrying value of net assets acquired on the business combination in December
2024. This arose on a common control transaction on the acquisition of Crowd
Group by Winvia, which was recorded as an adjustment to equity as opposed to
goodwill on the balance sheet.

 

Had this been a third-party acquisition, and the balance recorded as goodwill
accordingly, the Group would have net assets of £82.9m at 31 December 2025
(2024: £11.3m).

 

Going concern

 

The Directors have assessed the ability of the Company and the Group to
continue as a going concern. As part of this assessment, the Directors have
reviewed the Group's latest financial forecasts and cash flow projections,
which reflect current trading performance and the Directors' expectations of
future trading. These forecasts cover the period through to 31 December 2027.

 

At the year-end, the Group had a term loan facility with an outstanding
balance of £33.1m, which is due to mature in December 2030. The facility is
subject to financial covenant requirements, which are tested periodically
throughout the term of the loan.

 

The Directors have prepared cash flow forecasts covering the assessment
period. These forecasts have been subject to sensitivity analysis, including
the application of severe but plausible downside scenarios to reflect
potential reductions in revenue and other adverse changes in trading
performance. Under these scenarios, the Group continues to maintain
significant liquidity and substantial headroom against its financial covenants
and guarantees throughout the forecast period.

 

Based on this assessment, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the
Group and Company have adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future. Accordingly, the financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis.

 

Dividend

 

The Directors have proposed a final dividend of 5.9 pence per share based on
the financial performance of the Group in 2025. The dividend is subject to
approval at the forthcoming AGM. The dividend reflects the financial
performance of the Group during 2025, while at the same time allowing for
continued investment in product, prizes and the technology platform.

 

Taxation

 

The Group's tax charge in 2025 is £3.7m (2024: £1.4m), with the increase in
line with the growth in business activity in the year. The Group's tax charge
reflects the blended mix of the Group's operations between the United Kingdom,
Romania, Gibraltar, Malta and Cyprus.

 

Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

For the year ended 31 December 2025

 

                                               Year ended             Year ended

                                               31 December 2025       31 December

                                                                       2024
 Continuing operations                   Note  £'000                  £'000
 Revenue                                 4     170,331                38,090
 Cost of sales                                 (74,556)               (9,239)
 Gross profit                                  95,775                 28,851

 Marketing expenses                            (37,756)               (12,833)
 Administrative expenses                       (46,068)               (10,102)
 Profit from operations                  8     11,951                 5,916

 Finance income                          10    407                    162
 Finance costs                           10    (4,461)                (104)
 Fair value movement                     17    (138)                  -
 Share of post-tax profit of associates  16    1,133                  60
 Profit before tax                             8,892                  6,034
 Taxation                                11    (3,719)                (1,404)
 Profit for the year                           5,173                  4,630

 

 

 Profit from operations           11,951      5,916
 Depreciation             12, 15  1,197       108
 Amortisation             13      4,511       53
 Foreign exchange losses          60          69
 Adjusting items          7       13,467      457
 Adjusted EBITDA                  31,186      6,603

 

 

 

 

                                                                  Year ended             Year ended

                                                                  31 December 2025       31 December

                                                                                          2024
                                                            Note  £'000                  £'000

 Profit for the year                                              5,173                  4,630

 Items that will or may be reclassified in profit or loss:
 Exchange differences on translating foreign operations           796                    (20)
 Total other comprehensive income for the year                    796                    (20)

 Total comprehensive income for the year                          5,969                  4,610

 Profit for the year attributable to:
 Owners of the Parent                                             3,808                  4,360
 Non-controlling interests                                  27    1,365                  270
                                                                  5,173                  4,630
 Total comprehensive income attributable to:
 Owners of the Parent                                             4,580                  4,341
 Non-controlling interests                                  27    1,389                  269
                                                                  5,969                  4,610

 

 Earnings per share attributable to the ordinary equity holders of the Parent:  5
 Basic                                                                              0.04      0.05
 Diluted                                                                            0.04      0.05

 

The above statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income should be
read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.

 

Consolidated statement of financial position

As at 31 December 2025

 

 Company number: 03755182                 As at             As at

                                          31 December       31 December

                                          2025              2024
                                Note      £'000             £'000
 Assets
 Non-current assets
 Property, plant and equipment  12        3,935             3,497
 Intangible assets              13        21,696            8,104
 Right-of-use assets            15        7,054             3,568
 Investments in associates      16        3,232             2,915
 Derivative financial assets    17        2,110             586
 Other non-current assets       14        5,050             4,843
 Deferred tax assets            11        313               315
 Total non-current assets                 43,390            23,828

 Current assets
 Cash and cash equivalents      20        63,009            20,144
 Trade and other receivables    19        10,668            7,363
 Current tax receivable                   1,390             -
 Inventories                    18        2,840             631
 Loans receivable                         -                 302
 Total current assets                     77,907            28,440

 Total assets                             121,297           52,268
 Liabilities
 Current liabilities
 Trade and other payables       21        32,620            23,652
 Other financial liabilities    22        266               310
 Current tax payable                      5,339             3,703
 Lease liabilities              15        589               367
 Deferred consideration         26        5,600             -
 Borrowings                     29        4,560             56,731
 Total current liabilities                48,974            84,763

 Non-current liabilities
 Lease liabilities              15        6,944             3,450
 Borrowings                     29        28,544            -
 Deferred tax                   11        1,497             268
 Deferred consideration                   -                 100
 Total non-current liabilities            36,985            3,818

 Total liabilities                        85,959            88,581

 Net assets/(liabilities)                 35,338            (36,313)

 

 Company number: 03755182               As at                   31 December     2025                               As at                   31 December    2024
                              Note      £'000                                                                      £'000
 Equity
 Share capital                23        526                                                                        423
 Share premium                23        65,062                                                                     622
 Capital redemption reserve   28        289                                                                        289
 Share-based payment reserve  24        30                                                                         -
 Other reserves               28        (45,917)                                                                   (47,550)
 Foreign exchange reserve     28        753                                                                        (19)
 Retained earnings            28        12,341                                                                     9,102
 Total                                  33,084                                                                     (37,133)

 Non-controlling interests    27        2,254                                                                      820

 Total equity                           35,338                                                                     (36,313)

 

 

The above statement of financial position should be read in conjunction with
the accompanying notes.

 

The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Board
on 18 May 2026 and signed on its behalf by:

 

 

 

 

 

C A N
Butler
S Hay

Director
Director

 

Consolidated statement of changes in equity

For the year ended 31 December 2025

                                            Note  Share capital  Share premium     Capital redemption reserve      Share- based payment reserve      Other reserves      Foreign exchange reserves      Retained earnings      Total attributable to the Company     Non-controlling interests     Total equity
                                                  £'000          £'000             £'000                           £'000                             £'000               £'000                         £'000                   £'000                                 £'000                         £'000

 As at 31 December 2024                           423            622               289                             -                                 (47,550)            (19)                          9,102                   (37,133)                              820                           (36,313)

 Comprehensive income
 Profit for the year                              -              -                 -                               -                                 -                   -                             3,808                   3,808                                 1,365                         5,173
 Other comprehensive income
 Foreign currency difference                      -              -                 -                               -                                 -                   772                           -                       772                                   24                            796
 Total comprehensive income for the year          -              -                 -                               -                                 -                   772                           3,808                   4,580                                 1,389                         5,969

 Transactions with owners
 Debt to equity transaction                 23    -              26,036            -                               -                                 -                   -                             -                       26,036                                -                             26,036
 Common control transaction                 17    -              -                 -                               -                                 1,633               -                             -                       1,633                                 -                             1,633
 Issue of shares, net of transaction costs  23    103            38,404            -                               -                                 -                   -                             -                       38,507                                -                             38,507
 Capitalisation of waived debts                   -              -                 -                               -                                 -                   -                             (569)                   (569)                                 569                           -
 Distributions to non-controlling interest  27    -              -                 -                               -                                 -                   -                             -                       -                                     (524)                         (524)
 Share based payment                              -              -                 -                               30                                -                   -                             -                       30                                    -                             30
 Total transactions with owners                   103            64,440            -                               30                                1,633               -                             (569)                   65,637                                45                            65,682

 As at 31 December 2025                           526            65,062            289                             30                                (45,917)            753                           12,341                  33,084                                2,254                         35,338

 

 

 

                                          Note  Share capital  Share premium  Capital redemption reserve  Other reserves  Foreign exchange reserves   Retained earnings   Total attributable to the Company  Non-controlling interests  Total equity
                                                £'000          £'000          £'000                       £'000           £'000                      £'000                £'000                              £'000                      £'000

 As at 31 December 2023                         423            622            289                         -               -                          4,742                6,076                              -                          6,076

 Comprehensive income
 Profit for the year                            -              -              -                           -               -                          4,360                4,360                              270                        4,630
 Other comprehensive income
 Foreign currency difference                    -              -              -                           -               (19)                       -                    (19)                               (1)                        (20)
 Total comprehensive income for the year        -              -              -                           -               (19)                       4,360                4,341                              269                        4,610

 Transactions with owners
 Common control acquisition                     -              -              -                           (47,550)        -                          -                    (47,550)                           551                        (46,999)
 Total transactions with owners                 -              -              -                           (47,550)        -                          -                    (47,550)                           551                        (46,999)

 As at 31 December 2024                         423            622            289                         (47,550)        (19)                       9,102                (37,133)                           820                        (36,313)

Consolidated statement of cash flows

For the year ended 31 December 2025

                                                                     Year ended        Year ended

                                                                     31 December       31 December

                                                                     2025              2024

                                                                                       (Restated)
                                                               Note  £'000             £'000
 Cash flows from operating activities
 Profit before tax                                                   8,892             6,034
 Adjustments to reconcile profit before tax to net cash flows
 Depreciation of property, plant and equipment                 12    466               57
 Depreciation of right-of-use assets                           15    731               51
 Amortisation of intangible assets                             13    4,511             53
 Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment             12    37                38
 Finance income                                                10    (407)             (162)
 Finance expense                                               10    4,461             104
 Movement in fair value instruments                                  138               -
 Share of profits of associates                                16    (1,133)           (60)
 Share-based payment expense                                         30                -
 Tax paid                                                            (4,240)           (1,515)
 Increase in restricted cash                                   14    -                 (4,486)
 (Increase)/decrease in trade and other receivables            19    (2,953)           6,397
 (Increase) in inventories                                     18    (51)              (631)
 Increase/(decrease) in trade and other payables               21    5,195             (8,740)
 Net cash generated from/(used in) operating activities              15,677            (2,860)

 Cash flows from investing activities
 Cash paid to acquire subsidiary, net of cash acquired         26    (6,065)           (14,254)
 Purchase of intangible assets                                 13    (3,939)           -
 Purchase of property, plant and equipment                     12    (680)             (519)
 Dividend from associate                                       16    596               -
 Proceeds from loan receivable                                       302               -
 Interest received                                             10    407               162
 Net cash (used in) investing activities                             (9,379)           (14,611)

 Cash flows from financing activities
 Proceeds from issue of shares, net of issue costs             23    38,507            -
 Proceeds from borrowings                                      29    8,400             29,246
 Repayment of borrowings                                             (6,753)           -
 Interest paid on borrowings                                         (2,204)           -
 Interest paid on financial liabilities                              (465)             -
 Dividend paid to non-controlling interest                           (524)             -
 Lease principal paid                                          15    (528)             -
 Lease interest paid                                           15    (378)             (8)
 Net cash generated from financing activities                        36,055            29,238

 Net increase in cash and cash equivalents                           42,353            11,767
 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year                      20,144            8,352
 Effect of foreign exchange differences                              512               25
 Cash and cash equivalents at end of year                      20    63,009            20,144

 

The above statement of cash flows should be read in conjunction with the
accompanying notes.

 

 

Consolidated statement of cash flows (continued)

For the year ended 31 December 2025

 

Major non-cash transactions

On 8 April 2025, the Company completed a debt-to-equity conversion relating to
a £25,220,000 (equivalent to €30,400,000) liability owed to its major
shareholder as of 31 December 2024. This liability was extinguished by issuing
equity instruments (premium shares) to the shareholder. Due to foreign
exchange fluctuations, the equity instruments were issued at a value of
£26,036,000 (equivalent to €30,400,000), resulting in a £816,000 foreign
exchange loss from the carrying value of the liability, which has been
recognised within finance costs.

The above liability arose from a major non-cash transaction in the comparative
year relating to restructuring under common control.

The acquisition in the year included a non-cash transaction relating to the
settlement of outstanding directors loan accounts, see note 26 for further
information.

Customer list additions in the year included a non-cash transaction of
£929,900 (equivalent to €1,085,100) relating to the settlement of an
outstanding trading balance.

Prior year restatement

The comparative Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows has been restated to
correct an error relating to a £25,220,000 major non-cash transaction,
reducing Movement in trade and other payables (Operating cash flows) and
proceeds from bank borrowings (Financing activities) by the same amount. There
has been no impact on either the net movement in cash for the year or the
closing cash balance. There has been no impact on the Statement of
Comprehensive Income, Statement of Financial Position, or other reported
results.

 

 

Notes to the consolidated financial statements

 

1.     General information

 

Winvia Entertainment Plc ("Winvia" or the "Company"), formerly Best of the
Best Limited and Winvia Entertainment Limited, is a public limited company
incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales. The Company's registration
number is 03755182 and the registered office is located at 2 Plato Place,
72/74 St Dionis Road, London SW6 4TU.

 

On 11 December 2024 (the "Crowd Acquisition Date"), Winvia acquired 95.86% of
Crowd Services Ltd ("Crowd") and its subsidiaries (together the "Crowd
Group"). On 3 April 2025 (the "Click Acquisition Date") the Company acquired
100% of the share capital of Click Competitions Limited ("Click"), a UK-based
company in the competitions and prize draw market.

 

These consolidated financial statements comprise the Company and its
subsidiaries (together the "Group").

 

The current reporting period includes the 12 months ended 31 December 2025.
The comparative reporting period includes the previous 12 months ended 31
December 2024. The results in 2024 include the results of the Crowd Group for
the 20-day period from acquisition to 31 December 2024. The results in 2025
include the Crowd Group for the entire period, together with Click from
acquisition date.

 

The consolidated financial statements are presented in Pounds Sterling, which
is the functional currency of the Company. The functional currency of
subsidiaries includes Pounds sterling, Euro and Romanian Leu. Amounts are
rounded to the nearest thousand, unless otherwise stated.

 

2.     Accounting policies

 

The accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the financial statements
are set out below. These policies have been consistently applied to all the
periods presented, unless otherwise stated.

 

New or amended UK-adopted Accounting Standards and Interpretations

Standards, amendments and interpretations adopted from 1 January 2025:

 

The Group adopted the amendment to IAS 21 (The effects of changes in foreign
exchange rates) relating to lack of exchangeability. This amendment had no
effect on the financial statements of the Group or Company.

 

Standards, amendments and interpretations issued but not yet effective and
have not been early adopted by the Group:

 

IFRS 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements ("IFRS 18") was
issued by the International Accounting Standards Board in April 2025. IFRS 18
is effective on 1 January 2027 and is required to be applied retrospectively
to comparative periods presented, with early adoption permitted. IFRS 18, upon
adoption replaces IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements ("IAS 1").

 

IFRS 18 sets out new requirements focused on improving financial reporting by:

 

•      Requiring additional defined structure to the statement of
profit or loss (i.e. consolidated statement of income), to reduce diversity in
the reporting, by requiring five categories (operating, investing, financing,
income taxes and discontinued operations) and defined subtotals and totals
(operating income, income before financing, income taxes and net income);

•      Requiring disclosures in the notes to the financial statements
about management-defined performance measures (i.e. non-IFRS measures); and

•      Adding new principles for aggregation and disaggregation of
information in the primary financial statements and notes.

 

IFRS 18 will not impact the recognition or measurement of items in the
financial statements, but it might change what an entity reports as its
'operating profit or loss', due to the classification of certain income and
expense items between the five categories of the consolidated income
statement. It might also change what an entity reports as operating
activities, investing activities and financing activities within the statement
of cash flows, due to the change in classification of certain cash flow items
between these three categories of the cash flow statement. It might also
impact the Group's Alternative Performance Measures and reconciliations. The
Group is currently assessing the impact of adopting IFRS 18.

 

Other standards and amendments:

 

•      Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial
Instruments - Amendments to IFRS 9 Financial Instruments and IFRS 7 Financial
Instruments: Disclosures

•      Introduction of Subsidiaries without public accountability -
IFRS 19: Subsidiaries without Public Accountability: Disclosures

•      Contracts Referencing Nature-dependent Electricity (Amendments
to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7)

 

The Group's initial impact assessment of these new accounting standards and
amendments is that they will have no material impact to its results or
reporting.

 

Basis of preparation

This financial information does not constitute the Group's statutory accounts
for the years ended 31 December 2025 or 2024 but is derived from those
accounts. The statutory accounts for 2025 and 2024 were prepared in accordance
with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards and applicable requirements
of the Companies Act 2006. The auditor has reported on those accounts and
their reports were unqualified and did not contain any statement under section
498 of the Companies Act 2006, nor did they include any emphasis of matter
paragraph.

 

Historical cost convention

The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost
convention, except for certain assets and liabilities that are held at fair
value and are detailed in the Group's accounting policies.

 

Critical accounting estimates

The preparation of the financial statements requires the use of certain
critical accounting estimates. It also requires management to exercise its
judgement in the process of applying the Group's accounting policies.

 

The areas involving a higher degree of judgement or complexity, or areas where
assumptions and estimates are significant to the financial statements, are
disclosed in note 3.

 

Basis of consolidation

Subsidiaries

 

Subsidiaries are entities over which the Company has control. The Group
controls an entity when the Company is exposed to, or has rights to, variable
returns from its involvement with the entity and has the ability to affect
those returns through its power to direct the activities of the entity.
Subsidiaries are fully consolidated from the date on which control is
transferred to Company until the date that control ceases.

 

All intra-group assets and liabilities, equity, income, expenses and cash
flows relating to transactions between members of the Group are eliminated in
full on consolidation.

 

When assessing control over an entity, the Group considers the existence and
effect of potential voting rights, such as call options, that are substantive
and currently exercisable or convertible. Call options that provide the Group
with the ability to obtain control over an entity are evaluated under IFRS 10
to determine whether they confer control, even if not exercised, based on the
following factors.

·      Substantive Rights: The Group assesses whether call options are
substantive by considering their terms, including exercise price, expiry date,
and any conditions or barriers to exercise (e.g. regulatory approvals or
financial constraints). Options that are out of the money, not yet capable of
exercise due to unmet conditions, or subject to significant restrictions may
not be considered substantive.

·      Power to Direct Activities: If a call option provides the Group
with the present ability to direct the relevant activities of an entity (e.g.
through voting rights or board control upon exercise), it may indicate
control, depending on the option's terms and the Group's existing involvement.

·      Exposure to Variable Returns: The Group evaluates whether the
call option exposes it to variable returns from the entity, such as changes in
the entity's value or dividends, and whether exercising the option could
enhance those returns.

·      Protective Rights: The Group also evaluates whether any rights,
such as veto powers or other protective rights, exist that are designed to
protect the interests of the holder but do not grant the ability to direct the
relevant activities of the entity. Such protective rights are not considered
to confer control under IFRS 10.

When a call option results in control, the entity is consolidated as a
subsidiary from the date control is obtained, consistent with the Group's
consolidation policy. If the call option does not confer control (e.g. because
it is not yet capable of exercise) but provides significant influence, the
entity is accounted for as an associate under IAS 28, or as a financial
instrument under IFRS 9 if neither control nor significant influence exists.
The fair value of call options is recognised in the consolidated financial
statements, with changes in fair value recorded in accordance with IFRS 9,
unless the option is part of a business combination under IFRS 3.

 

The Group re-assesses the impact of call options on control at each reporting
date or when there are changes in the facts and circumstances (e.g. changes in
option terms or market conditions). Any resulting changes in consolidation
status are accounted for prospectively.

 

Associates

 

Associates are entities over which the Group has significant influence but not
control, or joint control. Significant influence is evidenced by factors such
as board representation, management personnel swapping or sharing, material
transactions with the investee, policy-making participation or technical
information exchanges.

 

Investments in associates are accounted for using the equity method under IAS
28. Under this method, the investment is initially recognised at cost, which
includes transaction costs and, where applicable, the fair value of any
rights,

options, or other financial instruments that form part of the investment at
acquisition. Such instruments, if not part of the equity method investment,
are accounted for in accordance with IFRS 9 until exercised or converted. The
carrying amount is subsequently adjusted to reflect the Group's share of the
associate's post-acquisition profit and loss and other comprehensive income.
Distributions received from the associate reduce the carrying amount of the
investment.

 

The investment in an associate is tested for impairment in accordance with IAS
36 Impairment of Assets ("IAS 36") whenever there are indicators of
impairment. If an impairment is identified, the carrying amount is reduced to
the recoverable amount, with any impairment loss recognised in the
consolidated statement of profit and loss.

 

Non-Controlling interests

 

Non-controlling interests ("NCI") in subsidiaries are presented separately
from the equity attributable to equity owners of Winvia (the "Parent").
Non-controlling interests are initially measured at their proportionate share
of the subsidiary's net assets at the date of acquisition. Subsequent to this,
the carrying amount of NCI is adjusted for the NCI's share of changes in the
subsidiary's equity. Total comprehensive income is attributed to NCI even if
this results in the NCI having a deficit balance.

 

Foreign operations

 

The Group includes foreign operations with functional currencies other than
Pounds Sterling. On consolidation, assets and liabilities are translated into
Pounds Sterling at the exchange rates prevailing at the balance sheet date,
while income and expenses are translated at average rates for the period.
Exchange differences arising on translation are recognised in other
comprehensive income and accumulated in a foreign currency transaction reserve
within equity.

 

Going concern

The Directors have assessed the ability of the Company and the Group to
continue as a going concern. As part of this assessment, the Directors have
reviewed the Group's latest financial forecasts and cash flow projections,
which reflect current trading performance and the Directors' expectations of
future trading. These forecasts cover the period through to 31 December 2027.

At the year-end, the Group had a term loan facility with an outstanding
balance of £33,104,000, which is due to mature in December 2030. The facility
is subject to financial covenant requirements which are tested periodically
throughout the term of the loan.

The Directors have prepared cash flow forecasts covering the assessment
period. These forecasts have been subject to sensitivity analysis, including
the application of severe but plausible downside scenarios to reflect
potential reductions in revenue and other adverse changes in trading
performance. Under these scenarios, the Group continues to maintain
significant liquidity and substantial headroom against its financial covenants
and guarantees throughout the forecast period.

Based on this assessment, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the
Group and Company have adequate resources to continue in operational existence
for the foreseeable future. Accordingly, the financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis.

Revenue recognition

Revenue is measured at the fair value of the consideration received or
receivable, net of discounts, rebates, VAT and other sales taxes or duties.
The Group applies IFRS 15 and IFRS 9 as appropriate to each activity,
determining whether it acts as a principal or an agent and recognising revenue
when (or as) performance obligations are satisfied or when gains or losses
arise.

Income arising from activities outside the scope of IFRS 15, such as fair
value gains and losses under IFRS 9, is presented within the gross revenue
line, even though it meets the definition of a gain rather than revenue under
IFRS standards.

Prize draws and competition tickets

Revenue is derived from the sale of competition tickets, either through individual ticket purchases or as part of a subscription, that confer entry into competitions to win houses, luxury cars and other prizes, or a cash alternative. Gross revenue represents total ticket sales, measured at fair value. Payment is due immediately upon purchase of tickets or a subscription.
Revenue is the amount recognised in the profit and loss, net of expected prize costs, which represent the cash or non-cash prizes payable to customers in each competition.
The Group accounts for competitions as financial instruments under IFRS 9. Once a ticket is sold in a competition, the Group recognises a financial instrument at fair value, representing the total obligation to deliver the competition and prize settlement. The instrument is measured at Fair Value Through Profit and Loss ("FVTPL"), with changes in fair value recognised in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income as gains or losses within revenue.
Prize costs (cash or non-cash) are incorporated into the fair value of revenue, reflecting the fair value of the obligation to deliver the prize. For non-cash prizes held in inventory (e.g. luxury cars), the inventory is derecognised in accordance with IAS 2 Inventories when it is delivered to the winner, at which point the risks and rewards of ownership are transferred.
Promotional incentives or credits for future competition entries ("Game Credits"), are recognised as financial liabilities under IFRS 9, representing an obligation to provide competition entries at the customer's discretion. Game Credits are recognised at fair value through profit and loss, with fair value changes recognised in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income within revenue.
The fair value of Game Credits is determined as the present value of expected redemptions, reflecting the obligation to provide competition entries at the customer's discretion. This valuation process estimates the proportion of Game Credits expected to be redeemed, based on historical redemption patterns.

 

Betting and gaming activities

Revenue from the Crowd Group's Online Sportsbook, Online Casino, Online Poker
(together, Business to Consumer, or "B2C") and Business to Business ("B2B")
activities (together the "Gaming" activities), are described below.

B2C - Online Casino and Online Sportsbook

The Group reports the gains and losses on all Online Casino and Sportsbook
activities as revenue, which is measured at the fair value of the
consideration received or receivable from customers less free bets,
promotions, bonuses and other fair value adjustments. Revenue is net of
VAT/GST. The Group considers betting and gaming revenue to be out of the scope
of IFRS 15 and accounts for those revenues within the scope of IFRS 9. Open
positions are carried at fair value, and gains and losses arising on this
valuation are recognised in revenue, as well as gains and losses realised on
positions that have closed, both of which are recognised at a point in time.

B2C - Online Poker

Online poker is a peer-to-peer game offered through multiple platforms within
the Group where individuals engage in game play against other individuals, not
against the Group. Players play against each other in either ring games (i.e.
games for cash on a hand-by-hand basis) or in tournaments (i.e. players play
against each other for tournament chips with prize money distributed to the
last remaining competitors) or variations thereof. The Group collects a
percentage of a game's wagers, known as the rake, up to a capped amount in
ring games and a tournament entry fee for scheduled tournaments and sit and go
tournaments.

Revenue is within the scope of IFRS 15 and reflects the net income earned when
a poker game is completed, which is when the performance obligation is deemed
to be satisfied. For ring games, revenue (the rake) is recognised at the
conclusion of each poker hand. For tournaments, revenue from entry fees
revenue is recognised when the tournament has concluded.

B2C - White label

The Group enters into white label agreements whereby it operates its B2C
services under its licence for third-party brands. The Group acts as the
principal in these arrangements and is responsible for the operation of the
services.   Revenue from consumers is recognised as income in the Group's
profit and loss in line with the B2C - Online Casino revenue policy.

Under these agreements, the Group is responsible for the operation of the
services, while the third-party brand owner provides access to the brand and
related services. Fees paid to the brand owner for the use of the brand and
associated services are treated as an expense, as the brand owner is
effectively a supplier. These expenses are recognised in profit and loss
within cost of sales as incurred, in line with the consumption of the brand
and services provided.

B2B - Operational support and licensee fee

Operational support and licensee fee relates to the licensing of the Group's
technology and the provision of certain marketing and operational support
services provided via various distribution channels. The fee is typically
based on the underlying gaming revenue earned by the B2B customers calculated
using the contractual terms in place. Revenue is within the scope of IFRS 15
and is recognised when the performance obligation is met which is when the
gaming transaction occurs and is net of refunds, concessions and discounts.

Segmental reporting

Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the internal
reporting provided to the Group's chief operating decision-maker (''CODM'').
These operating segments reflect the basis on which the Group's performance is
assessed, and resources are allocated, by the CODM.

 

Cost of sales

Cost of sales consists primarily of gaming duties, payment service providers'
commissions, commission and royalties payable to third parties, all of which
are recognised on an accruals basis. As disclosed in the revenue accounting
policy above, the costs recognised in respect of competition prizes are
charged to revenue.

 

Foreign currency

Functional currencies

Items included in the financial statements of each Group entity are measured
using the currency of the primary economic environment in which each entity
operates (the "functional currency'').

 

The consolidated financial statements of the Group are presented in Pounds
Sterling ("GBP"), which is the Group's presentation currency. The functional
currency of the Company is GBP. The Group includes subsidiaries with
functional currencies other than GBP, such as the Euro for entities operating
in countries that have adopted the Euro, and the Romanian Leu for entities
operating in Romania.

 

Transactions and balances

Foreign currency transactions are translated into the functional currency of
each Group entity using the exchange rates prevailing at the dates of the
transactions. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign
currencies are translated into the functional currency at the exchange rate at
the reporting date. Non-monetary assets and liabilities measured at fair value
in a foreign currency are translated into the functional currency at the
exchange rate when the fair value is determined. Non-monetary items measured
at historical cost in a foreign currency are translated using the exchange
rate at the date of the transaction. Foreign exchange gains and losses
resulting from the settlement of such transactions, and from the translation
at the reporting date exchange rates of monetary assets and liabilities
denominated in foreign currencies, are recognised in profit or loss. They are
presented within finance income or costs where they relate to financing
activities, or administrative expenses for all other transactions.

 

Foreign operations

The assets and liabilities of foreign operations are translated into GBP at
the exchange rates at the reporting date. The income and expenses of foreign
operations are translated into GBP at average exchange rates.

Foreign currency differences are recognised in other comprehensive income and
accumulated in the foreign exchange reserve within equity, except to the
extent that the translation difference is allocated to non-controlling
interests.

On the disposal of a foreign operation (i.e. a disposal of the Group's entire
interest in a foreign operation, or a disposal involving loss of control over
a subsidiary that includes a foreign operation), all of the exchange
differences accumulated in the foreign exchange reserve attributable to the
owners of the Company are reclassified to profit and loss as part of the gain
or loss on disposal.

In the case of a partial disposal that does not result in the Group losing
control over a subsidiary that includes a foreign operation, the proportionate
share of accumulated exchange differences is re-attributed to non-controlling
interests and are not recognised in profit and loss. For all other partial
disposals, the proportionate share of the accumulated exchange differences is
reclassified to profit and loss.

Net finance costs

Finance costs

Finance costs comprise of interest expense on borrowings and lease
liabilities, which are recognised in profit or loss. Finance costs are
expensed in the period in which they are incurred and presented within finance
costs.

 

Finance income

Finance income comprises interest income on bank deposits and is recognised in
profit or loss when it is earned.

 

Current and deferred taxation

Current tax

 

Income tax expense comprises of current and deferred tax. It is recognised in
profit and loss except to the extent that it relates to items recognised
directly in equity or in other comprehensive income, in which case it is
recognised in equity or other comprehensive income.

The Group is subject to income tax in several jurisdictions and significant
judgement is required in determining the provision for income taxes. During
the ordinary course of business, there are transactions and calculations for
which the ultimate tax determination is uncertain. As a result, the Group
recognises tax liabilities based on estimates of whether additional taxes and
interest will be due. These tax liabilities are recognised when, despite the
Group's belief that its tax positions are supportable, the Group believes it
is more likely than not that a taxation authority would not accept its filing
position. In these cases, the Group records its tax balances based on either
the most likely amount or the expected value, which weights multiple potential
scenarios. The Group believes that its accruals for tax liabilities are
adequate for all open years based on its assessment of many factors including
past experience and interpretations of law. This assessment relies on
estimates and assumptions that may involve a series of complex judgements
about future events. To the extent that the final tax outcome of these matters
is different than the amounts recorded, such differences will impact income
tax expenses in the period in which such determination is made. Where
management conclude that it is not probable that the taxation authority will
accept an uncertain tax treatment, they calculate the effect of uncertainty in
determining the related taxable profit (tax loss), tax bases, unused tax
losses, unused tax credits or tax rates. The effect of uncertainty for each
uncertain tax treatment is reflected by using the expected value - the sum of
probabilities and the weighted amounts in a range of possible outcomes.

Deferred tax

Deferred tax is recognised using the liability method on temporary differences
arising between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying
amounts in the consolidated financial statements. Deferred tax is measured
using tax rates and laws that have been enacted, or substantively enacted, by
the reporting date and are expected to apply when the related deferred tax
asset is realised or the deferred tax liability is settled.

 

Deferred tax assets are recognised only to the extent that it is probable that
future taxable profit will be available against which the temporary
differences can be utilised. Deferred tax liabilities are recognised for all
taxable temporary differences, except where the Group can control the reversal
of the temporary difference and it is probable that the temporary difference
will not reverse in the foreseeable future.

 

Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset when there is a legally
enforceable right to set off current tax assets against current tax
liabilities, and when the deferred tax balances relate to income taxes levied
by the same taxation authority, and the Group intends to settle its current
tax assets and liabilities on a net basis.

 

Business combinations

Acquisitions within the scope of IFRS 3

For business combinations, the Group estimates the fair value of the
consideration transferred, which can include assumptions about the future
business performance of the business acquired and an appropriate discount rate
to determine the fair value of any deferred and contingent consideration. The
Group then estimates the fair value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed
in the business combination.

The area of most notable estimation within the fair value exercise relates to
separately identifiable intangible assets, whose estimates can require
significant management assumptions to be applied. The Group engages external
experts to support the valuation process, where appropriate.

The functional currency of the acquired business is determined in accordance
with IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates. The Group
identifies the functional currency based on the primary economic environment
in which the acquired entity operates, typically considering the currency that
mainly influences sales prices and costs. All assets, liabilities, and
goodwill arising from the acquisition are translated into the Group's
presentation currency, if different, using the exchange rate at the
acquisition date. Any subsequent foreign exchange differences arising from
translation are recognised in other comprehensive income.

IFRS 3 Business Combinations allows the Group to recognise provisional fair
values if the initial accounting for the business combination is incomplete.
 These provisional amounts may be adjusted within a measurement period of up
to 12 months from the acquisition date to reflect new information obtained
about facts and circumstances that existed at the acquisition date.

Goodwill on acquisition is initially measured at cost, being the excess of the
cost of the business combination over the Group's interest in the net fair
value of the separately identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent
liabilities at the date of acquisition in accordance with IFRS 3 Business
Combinations. Goodwill is not amortised but reviewed for impairment at the
first reporting period after acquisition and then annually thereafter. As
such it is stated at cost less any provision for impairment of value. Any
impairment is recognised immediately in the consolidated income statement and
is not subsequently reversed. On acquisition, any goodwill acquired is
allocated to cash-generating units for the purpose of impairment testing.
Where goodwill forms part of a cash-generating unit and part of the operation
within that unit is disposed of, the goodwill associated with the disposal is
included in the carrying amount of the assets when determining the gain or
loss on disposal. Where negative goodwill is determined to arise, the amount
is recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income immediately.

Acquisitions under common control

Where management conclude that a transaction falls within the scope exclusion
of IFRS 3 in respect of transactions under common control, an alternative
accounting policy must be selected. IFRS does not provide guidance on
accounting for acquisition of subsidiaries that are under common control.
Therefore, the Directors are required to develop an accounting policy in
accordance with IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and
Errors (paragraphs 10-12) and consider relevant guidance from other
standard-setting bodies, accounting literature, and accepted industry
practices. The Directors have determined that book value accounting is most
appropriate and is applied as follows.

 

·      Assets, liabilities, income and expenses of the subsidiaries are
recorded at their existing carrying values at the date of transfer.

·      The results of the subsidiaries are included in the combined
financial statements from the date of combination.

·      Any difference between the cost of investment and the carrying
value of net assets acquired is recorded directly in equity within other
reserves and NCI.

 

No goodwill or gain on bargain purchase is recognised.

 

In applying book value accounting when preparing the consolidated financial
statements, to the extent the carrying value of the assets and liabilities
acquired under book value accounting is different to the cost of investment,
the difference is recorded in an equity account titled 'other reserves'.

There were no acquisitions under common control in the year. The Crowd
acquisition in the comparative period was treated as an acquisition under
common control.

Property, plant and equipment

Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost, net of accumulated
depreciation and accumulated impairment losses, if any.

 

Depreciation is provided at the following annual rates in order to write off
each asset over its useful economic life:

 

Long leasehold property
                                   99 years

Improvements to property
 
over the period of the lease

Computer equipment
 
3-5 years

Motor vehicles
 
3-5 years

Fixtures and
fittings
3-5 years

 

An item of property, plant and equipment is derecognised upon disposal or when
no future economic benefits are expected from the use or disposal. Any gain or
loss arising on de-recognition of the asset (calculated as the difference
between the net disposal proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset) is
included in the statement of comprehensive income when the asset is
derecognised.

 

The residual values, useful economic lives and methods of depreciation are
reviewed at each financial year end and adjusted prospectively, if
appropriate.

 

Intangible assets

Intangible assets are recognised at cost or book value less any accumulated
amortisation and impairment.

An intangible asset, which is an identifiable non-monetary asset without
physical substance, is recognised to the extent that it is probable that the
expected future economic benefits attributable to the asset will flow to the
Group and that its cost can be measured reliably. The asset is deemed to be
identifiable when it is separate or when it arises from contractual or other
legal rights.

Following the acquisition of the Crowd Group, the Group recognised existing
intangible assets acquired at book value, in line with the accounting policy
adopted for recognising the acquisition. The Crowd Group's intangible assets
are software licenses and intellectual property. Amortisation is charged to
the profit or loss on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful economic
lives of the intangible assets. The Group's intangible assets have the
following estimated useful lives:

Software
licenses
3 years

Platform technology
                                3 years

Customer
lists
2-3 years

Domains and
brands
3-5 years

 

Intellectual property and development costs

 

Expenditure on research is recognised as an expense in the period in which it
is incurred. Development costs are capitalised when all of the following
conditions are satisfied:

 

•      Completion of the intangible asset is technically feasible so
that it will be available for use or sale;

•      The Group intends to complete the intangible asset and use or
sell it;

•      The Group has the ability to use or sell the intangible asset;

•      The intangible asset will generate probable future economic
benefits. Among other things, this requires that there is a market for the
output from the intangible asset or for the intangible asset itself, or, if it
is to be used internally, the asset will be used in generating such benefits;

•      There are adequate technical, financial and other resources to
complete the development and to use or sell the intangible asset; and

•      The expenditure attributable to the intangible asset during its
development can be measured reliably.

 

Development costs not meeting the criteria for capitalisation are expensed as
incurred.

 

Intellectual property, including acquired intangible assets, is recognised at
cost and is amortised on a straight-line basis over its estimated useful life.
The useful life and amortisation method are reviewed at each reporting date,
with any changes accounted for prospectively.

 

All finite-life intangible assets are reviewed for indicators of impairment at
each reporting date and tested for impairment whenever such indicators arise.

Leased assets

At inception of a contract, the Group assesses whether a contract is, or
contains, a lease. A contract is, or contains, a lease if the contract conveys
the right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in
exchange for consideration.

The Group as lessee

The Group recognises a right-of-use ("ROU") asset and a lease liability at the
lease commencement date. The ROU asset is initially measured at cost, which
comprises the initial amount of the lease liability adjusted for any lease
payments made at or before the commencement date, plus any initial direct
costs incurred, less any lease incentives received.

ROU assets are subsequently depreciated using the straight-line method from
the commencement date to the earlier of the end of the useful life of the
right-of-use asset or the end of the lease term. The lease term is determined
at the commencement date and includes the non-cancellable period of the lease,
together with periods covered by an option to extend the lease if the Group is
reasonably certain to exercise that option, and periods covered by an option
to terminate the lease if the Group is reasonably certain not to exercise that
option. Break clauses are considered in determining the lease term when the
Group has the unilateral right to terminate the lease early, assessing the
likelihood of exercising such clauses based on economic incentives and
operational requirements. The estimated useful lives of the ROU assets are
based on the lease term, unless the Group expects to use the asset beyond the
lease term. ROU assets are periodically reduced by impairment losses, if any,
and adjusted for certain remeasurements of the lease liability.

The lease liability is initially measured at the present value of the lease
payments that are not paid at the commencement date, discounted using the
interest rate implicit in the lease or, if that rate cannot be readily
determined, the Group's incremental borrowing rate. Lease payments include
fixed payments and variable payments based on an index or rate, and include
amounts expected to be paid under residual value guarantees, and payments
related to purchase or termination options reasonably certain to be exercised.
The lease term is determined consistently with the ROU asset, including the
non-cancellable period, extension options reasonably certain to be exercised,
termination options reasonably certain not to be exercised, and break clauses
assessed based on the likelihood of exercise considering economic incentives
and operational requirements.

The lease liability is measured at amortised cost using the effective interest
method. It is remeasured when there is a change in future lease payments
arising from a change in an index or rate, or if the Group changes its
assessment of whether it will exercise a purchase, extension or termination
option.

When the lease liability is remeasured in this way, a corresponding adjustment
is made to the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset, or is recorded in
profit or loss, if the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset has been
reduced to zero.

Inventories

Inventories are stated at the lower of cost and net realisable value ("NRV").
Cost is determined on a specific identification basis, reflecting the
individual costs of high-value items such as cars and other prizes held for
competitions. Cost comprises the purchase price, including taxes and duties
and transport costs to bring the inventory to its present location and
condition. NRV is the estimated value obtained in the ordinary course of
business, less the estimated costs to complete.

Inventories primarily consist of prizes, including cars and luxury items, held
by the Group for its competition business.

At each reporting date, stocks are assessed for impairment. An impairment loss
is recognised in profit or loss if the carrying amount exceeds NRV, such as
when prizes are damaged, obsolete, or subject to a decline in market value.
The impairment loss is measured as the difference between the carrying amount
and NRV, based on market prices or independent valuations for high-value items
like cars.

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents consist of cash at bank and in hand and short-term
deposits.

Included in cash are balances held on behalf of players, equal to the player
balances included in trade and other payables, which are internally ring
fenced and are not for corporate use, in line with licensing requirements.

Restricted cash

Restricted cash comprises cash balances that are not available for general use
due to legal or regulatory requirements, including those held to comply with
gambling legislation requirements, such as deposits in non-operational State
Treasury accounts or collateral for bank warranties. These balances are
classified as financial assets and measured at amortised cost. Restricted cash
is excluded from 'Cash and Cash Equivalents' and presented as 'Other
Non-Current Assets' if the restrictions extend beyond 12 months, or 'Current
Assets' if realisable within 12 months. The Group assesses the duration and
nature of restrictions to determine the appropriate classification.

Financial instruments

Financial assets

The Group classifies its financial assets into one of the categories discussed
below, depending on the purpose for which the asset was acquired. The Group's
accounting policy for each category is as follows:

 

Amortised cost

The Group's financial assets measured at amortised cost comprise trade and
other receivables, loan receivables, cash and cash equivalents, and restricted
cash. These assets are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or
determinable payments that are not quoted in an active market.

 

Trade receivables are recognised initially at the transaction price (amount of
consideration that is unconditional), unless they contain significant
financing components, in which case they are recognised at fair value. They
are subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective interest
method, less expected credit loss ("ECL") allowance.

 

Payment processor balances represent funds held by third-party payment
providers (e.g. card processors) prior to settlement into the Group's bank
accounts. They constitute contractual rights to receive cash and are
classified as trade receivables measured at amortised cost.

 

Other receivables are initially recognised at fair value plus transaction
costs that are directly attributable to their acquisition and subsequently
measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method, less ECL
allowance.

 

Cash and cash equivalents consist of cash at bank and in hand, short-term
deposits with an original maturity of less than three months and customer
balances. Cash-in-transit, representing cash transferred from a third-party
cash-handling service but not yet deposited at the reporting date, is
recognised as a receivable under IFRS when the entity retains the risks and
rewards of ownership. It is measured at its nominal value and classified as
trade receivables.

 

Impairment provisions for trade receivables are recognised based on the
simplified approach within IFRS 9 using the lifetime expected credit losses.
The ECL balance is determined based on historical credit loss data, adjusted
for forward-looking information and management's knowledge of customer credit
risk. Provisions are recorded in a separate allowance account with the loss
being recognised within administrative expenses in profit or loss. On
confirmation that the trade receivable will not be collectable, the gross
carrying value of the asset is written off against the associated provision.

 

Fair value through profit or loss

Financial assets held at fair value through the profit or loss comprise equity
investments held. These are carried in the statement of financial position at
fair value (refer to fair value hierarchy). Subsequent to initial recognition,
changes in fair value are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.

 

Financial liabilities

All financial liabilities are recognised when the Group becomes a party to the
contractual provision of the instrument. The Group's financial liabilities are
classified into two categories: amortised cost and FVTPL.

 

Amortised cost

The Group's financial liabilities measured at amortised cost comprise trade
payables, other payables and bank and other borrowings. These liabilities are
initially measured at fair value, net of any transaction costs directly
attributable to the issue of the instrument, and subsequently measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest rate method. The effective
interest method calculates the amortised cost of a financial liability and
allocates interest expense over the relevant period. The effective interest
rate is the rate that exactly discounts estimated future cash payments
(including all fees and amounts paid or received that form an integral part of
the effective interest rate, transaction costs, and other premiums or
discounts) through the expected life of the financial liability to the
amortised cost of the financial liability.

 

Fair value through profit or loss

The Group's financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit or
loss include game credits and competition liabilities, arising from the
Group's obligation to deliver future competition entries with cash settlement
options, classified as financial instruments under IFRS 9. Game credits,
issued as promotional incentives or refunds, are initially recognised at
nominal value, which is the amount credited to customers for use in purchasing
future competition entries, and subsequently measured at fair value, based on
expected redemption patterns. Fair value changes are recognised in revenue in
profit or loss. Significant judgements and estimates related to the fair value
of game credits are discussed in the key estimates and judgements section.

 

Fair value hierarchy

All assets and liabilities for which fair value is measured or disclosed in
the consolidated financial statements are categorised within the fair value
hierarchy. The fair value hierarchy prioritises the inputs to valuation
techniques used to measure fair value. The Group uses the following hierarchy
for determining and disclosing the fair value of financial instruments and
other assets and liabilities for which the fair value was used:

-               level 1: quoted prices in active markets for
identical assets or liabilities;

-               level 2: inputs other than quoted prices
included in level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either
directly (as prices) or indirectly (derived from prices); and

-               level 3: inputs for the asset or liability that
are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

 

Derivative financial instruments - call options

Derivatives are measured at fair value and the fair value is reassessed at
each reporting date. Changes in the fair value of derivatives contracts are
recognised in profit or loss.

 

Dividends payable

Dividends are recognised when they become legally due. In the case of interim
dividends to equity shareholders, this is when paid by the Company. In the
case of final dividends, this is when they are declared and approved by the
shareholders at the AGM.

 

Equity instruments

An equity instrument is any contract that evidences a residual interest in the
assets of a company after deducting all of its liabilities. Equity instruments
issued are recorded at the proceeds received net of direct issue costs.

 

 

Impairment of financial assets

The Group's financial assets subject to impairment primarily consist of trade
receivables, including processor balances held by third-party payment
providers. These short-term financial assets are measured at amortised cost
and assessed for impairment using the simplified approach in IFRS 9, whereby
the loss allowance is measured at an amount equal to the lifetime expected
credit losses.

 

The gross carrying amount of a financial asset is written off when the Group
has no reasonable expectations of recovering a financial asset in its entirety
or a portion thereof.

 

Impairment of non-financial assets

Assets (other than deferred tax assets) that have an indefinite useful life
are not subject to amortisation and are tested annually for impairment. Assets
that are subject to depreciation or amortisation are reviewed for impairment
whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount
may not be recoverable.

 

For impairment testing, assets are grouped together into the smallest group of
assets that generates cash flows from continuing use that are largely
independent of the cash inflows of other assets or cash-generating units.

 

The recoverable amount of an asset or cash-generating unit is the greater of
its value in use and its fair value less costs to sell. Value in use is based
on the estimated future cash flows, discounted to their present value using a
pre-tax discount rate that reflects current market assessments of the time
value of money and the risks specific to the asset or cash-generating unit.

 

An impairment loss is recognised if the carrying amount of an asset or
cash-generating unit exceeds its recoverable amount. Impairment losses are
recognised in profit or loss.

 

An impairment loss is reversed only to the extent that the asset's carrying
amount does not exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined,
net of depreciation or amortisation, if no impairment loss had been
recognised.

 

Loans and borrowings

Interest-bearing loans and borrowings are initially recorded at the amount of
proceeds received, net of transaction costs. Borrowings are subsequently
carried at amortised cost with the difference between the proceeds, net of
transaction costs and the amount due on redemption, being recognised as a
charge to the income statement over the period of the relevant borrowing.

 

Interest expense is recognised on the basis of the effective interest method
and is included in finance costs.

 

Borrowings are classified as current liabilities unless the Group has an
unconditional right to defer settlement of the liability for at least 12
months after the reporting date.

 

Share-based payments

Equity-settled share-based payments are measured at fair value at the date of
grant by reference to the fair value of the equity instruments granted. The
fair value determined at the grant date is expensed on a straight-line basis
over the vesting period with a corresponding adjustment to equity. The amount
recognised as an expense is adjusted to reflect the number of awards for which
the related service and non-market performance conditions are expected to be
met. Forfeitures of share-based payment awards are accounted for as they
occur, with the expense adjusted to reflect the actual number of awards
expected to vest, without revising the original fair value determined at the
grant date.

 

When the terms and conditions of equity-settled share-based payments at the
time they were granted are subsequently modified, the fair value of the
share-based payment under the original terms and conditions, and under the
modified terms and conditions, are both determined at the date of the
modification.  Any excess of the modified fair value over the original fair
value is recognised over the remaining vesting period in addition to the grant
date fair value of the original share-based payment.  The share-based payment
expense is not adjusted if the modified fair value is less than the original
fair value. In the event of forfeitures of share-based payment awards, any
charges previously recorded for those awards are reversed.

Cancellations or settlements (including those resulting from employee
redundancies) are treated as an acceleration of vesting and the amount that
would have been recognised over the remaining vesting period is recognised
immediately.

 

Adjusting items and alternative performance measures ("APMs")

The Group presents adjusted performance measures, which differ from statutory
measures, as the Group considers that it allows a further understanding of the
underlying financial performance of the Group. These measures are described as
'adjusted' and are used by management to measure and monitor the Group's
underlying financial performance.

 

These APMs are non-GAAP measures and should not be considered as replacements
for IFRS measures. The Group's definition of these non-GAAP measures may not
be comparable to other similarly titled measures reported by other companies.

 

The Group uses Adjusted EBITDA as an APM. Adjusted EBITDA is used to evaluate
the Group's financial performance, and offers a more consistent measure across
periods, serving as a key metric for management incentives. Adjusted EBITDA is
calculated by excluding depreciation, amortisation, foreign exchange gains and
losses and adjusting items from profit from operations, its closest equivalent
IFRS measure.

 

Adjusting items are items of income or expenditure that management considers,
due to their nature, size or incidence, do not reflect the underlying
performance of the Group's core operations for the period. They include
amounts that are highly abnormal or infrequent, only incidentally related to
the Group's ordinary activities, are non-cash, or are associated with
investment activity, acquisitions, disposals, or corporate restructuring.

 

Employee benefits

The Group operates defined contribution pension schemes for certain employees
of the Company. Contributions to these money purchase schemes are recognised
as an expense within the Statement of Comprehensive Income as incurred.

 

3.     Critical accounting judgements, estimates and assumptions

 

The preparation of the financial statements requires the use of certain
critical accounting estimates. It also requires management to exercise
judgement and use assumptions in applying the Group's accounting policies.
Estimates and judgements will, by definition, seldom equal the related actual
results but are based on historical experience and expectations of future
events. Management believe that the estimates utilised in preparing the
financial statements are reasonable.

 

Estimates and judgements are continually evaluated based on historical
experience and other factors, including expectations of future events that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. In the future, actual
experience may differ from these estimates and assumptions. The judgements and
key sources of estimation uncertainty that have a significant effect on the
amounts recognised in the financial statements are as follows.

 

Critical accounting judgements:

 

White label agreements

At the commencement of a white label agreement, management evaluates the terms
of the arrangement, including the roles and responsibilities of each party,
the use of the Group's or another party's licence, the fee structure for the
use of third-party brands and associate services, and the degree of control
exercised by the Group. This assessment determines whether the Group acts as
the principal, controlling the services provided to B2C customers, and thus
recognises the gross revenue from customers, with fees paid to the brand owner
treated as an expense. If the Group exercises control, any fees owed to the
third-party brand owner for the use of the brand and associated services are
recognised as a cost of sales or operating expense, depending on the nature of
the agreement.

 

Management also assesses whether the arrangement gives rise to intangible
assets, such as rights to use the brand. If the agreement primarily involves
the provision of services by both parties without transferring control of an
identifiable intangible asset, no intangible asset is recognised, and payments
are treated as operating expenses or prepayments.

 

Classification of investments

The Group classifies its investments based on the level of influence or
control over the investee. Investments are classified as subsidiaries under
IFRS 10 when the Group has control, defined as power over the investee's
relevant activities, exposure to variable returns and the ability to affect
those returns through its power. Investments are classified as associates
under IAS 28 when the Group holds significant influence, typically evidenced
by:

·      Board of Directors' representation;

·      Management personnel swapping or sharing;

·      Material transactions with the investee;

·      Policy-making participation; and

·      Technical information exchanges.

 

Where investments contain call options which are not yet exercisable, they are
classified as financial assets under IFRS 9 and measured at fair value.
Significant judgement is applied in assessing these criteria, particular when
determining the appropriate classification of equity interests and related
instruments, as outlined below in the case of two equity interests:

Exalogic

The Group holds a 35% equity interest in Exalogic and Exalogic Sistemi
(together the "Exalogic Companies"), along with two call options to increase
ownership. The Group exercised significant judgement in assessing the
accounting for its 35% equity interest in the Exalogic Companies, alongside
the two call options, determining whether the investment constitutes control,
significant influence, or a financial asset, impacting the financial
statements' presentation. Refer to note 17 for further details of the call
options and their terms.

Under IFRS 10, the Group assessed that it does not control the Exalogic
Companies, as the 35% voting rights, together with the call options, do not
give the Group control as the options are not currently exercisable. The
investment was assessed to convey significant influence through voting rights
and board representation, leading to its classification as an associate under
IAS 28, accounted for using the equity method. The call options, which are not
exercisable at this point in time, were judged to be derivatives under IFRS 9,
requiring separate fair value measurement at acquisition and each reporting
date, with fair values determined using specialist valuation inputs, as their
non-exercisable nature precludes inclusion in control or influence
assessments. The purchase consideration was allocated between the equity
interest and the options based on the options' fair value, a judgement relying
on specialist valuation to ensure appropriate separation of derivative
components.

WindGG

The Group has a 60% shareholding interest in WindGG Holding Limited
("WindGG"). The Group exercised significant judgement in assessing whether it
controls WindGG under IFRS 10, which requires power over the investee's
relevant activities, exposure to variable returns and the ability to affect
those returns through its power. The 60% shareholding provides the Group with
majority voting rights and the ability to appoint the majority of WindGG's
board of directors, enabling the Group to direct key operating and strategic
activities, such as financial planning, budgeting and operational decision
making.

The Group also considered the existence of reserved matters that require
approval from the 40% minority shareholder. These matters, which include
decisions such as liquidation or significant changes to the company's
constitution, were assessed as protective rights under IFRS 10, as they are
designed to protect the minority shareholder's interest and do not restrict
the Group's ability to direct WindGG's relevant activities. Consequently, the
Group determined that it exercises control over WindGG, and WindGG is
accounted for as a subsidiary, with its results consolidated in the Group's
financial statements and 40% included as a non-controlling interest.

Taxation

The Group is subject to various forms of tax in a number of jurisdictions.
Given the nature of the industry and the jurisdictions within which the Group
operates, the tax, legal and regulatory regimes are continuously changing and
subject to differing interpretations. Judgement is applied in order to
adequately provide for uncertain tax positions where it is believed that it is
more likely than not that an economic outflow will arise. The Group has
provided for uncertain tax positions which meet the recognition threshold, and
these positions are included within tax liabilities. There is a risk that
additional liabilities could arise. Given the uncertainty and the complexity
of application of international tax in the sector, it is not feasible to
accurately quantify any possible range of liability or exposure, and this has
therefore not been disclosed.

 

The Group is aware of the increasing interest in the applicability of UK sales
tax ('VAT'), or other possible duty tax, to the sale of tickets for prize draw
competitions in the United Kingdom and have engaged with His Majesty's Revenue
and Customs ("HMRC") on this matter during the year and post year-end.

 

Based on professional advice taken to date, the Directors believe it is
appropriate to treat the prize draws as exempt from VAT, however, recognise
there is increased risk and the overall conclusion may be subject to further
assessment by HMRC.  Accordingly, the Directors have determined that the risk
around historic VAT liabilities or other duty tax constitutes a contingent
liability, see note 30 for further information.

 

Capitalised development costs

 

The capitalisation of development costs requires judgement in estimating the
time employees spend on qualifying development activities. Management reviews
expenditures, including wages and benefits for employees, incurred on
development activities and based on its judgment of the costs incurred
assesses whether the expenditure meets the capitalisation criteria set out in
IAS 38 and the Group's intangible assets accounting policy.

 

See note 13 for costs capitalised in the year.

 

Acquisition of customer lists

 

On 18 June 2025, the Group acquired the customer list of a white label brand
for €3m (£2.6m). Management exercised judgement in assessing if the
acquisition met the definition of a business as set out in IFRS 3.B11. In
performing this assessment, management considered the nature of the assets
acquired and noted that no employees, contractors, or substantive processes
were transferred as part of the transaction. Accordingly, management concluded
that the acquired customer list did not constitute a business, as it was not
capable of operating independently to generate outputs without the Group's
existing processes and workforce.

 

Management determined that as a result, the acquisition does not meet the
definition of a business and is not treated as a business combination under
IFRS 3.

 

Key sources of estimation uncertainty:

 

Purchase price allocation

 

Click Competitions Limited ("Click") was acquired by the group on 3 April
2025. As part of the acquisition, management are required to allocate the
purchase consideration to the identifiable assets and liabilities acquired,
including separately recognising any intangible assets such as customer
relationships or brands not previously recognised in the acquiree's financial
statements.

 

While the book values of working capital balances and acquired property and
equipment have been determined to be largely approximate to their fair values,
the valuation of previously unidentified intangible assets such as customer
lists and brand is dependent on a number of assumptions and estimates by
management (such as discount rates, relief from royalty rates, and estimated
future cash flows including forecast underlying trading, and the attrition
curves of customer relationships) that input into valuation techniques used in
deriving their fair values. Estimates made by management influence the amounts
of the acquired assets and assumed liabilities and the depreciation and
amortisation of acquired assets.  These estimates involve inherent
uncertainty and can materially affect the amounts recognised for intangible
assets and goodwill. Accordingly, the purchase price allocation represents a
critical accounting estimate due to the potential impact of changes in these
assumptions on the financial statements.

 

4.     Revenue

 

The Group generates revenue primarily from operating prize draw competitions
and skill-based games to win luxury cars and other prizes, and providing B2C
online casino and sportsbook to individuals, and as a B2B offering, in Romania
and other jurisdictions the Crowd Group operate in.

 

No single customer makes up 10% or more of revenue in any period.

 

Geographical reporting

 

The Group's performance can be reviewed by considering the geographical
markets and geographical locations within which the Group operates based on
location of the customer. This information is outlined below:

 

                    Year ended         Year ended

                    31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                    £'000              £'000
 United Kingdom     37,393             26,682
 Romania            129,831            8,578
 Rest of the World  3,107              2,830
 Total revenue      170,331            38,090

 

Revenue by product offering

 

The Group's revenue is derived from two primary product offerings: Prize Draw
Competitions, including skill-based games, to win luxury cars, houses and
other prizes; and Online Gaming, which comprises Online Casino and Online
Sportsbook, Online Poker, White Label and B2B arrangements. For the purposes
of disclosure, the Group has separately identified which revenue streams have
been accounted for under IFRS 15, and the income that has been recognised
under IFRS 9, that has been included within net revenue. This information is
outlined below:

 

                                                    Year ended         Year ended    31 December  2024

                                                    31 December 2025
                                                    £'000              £'000
 Online Poker                                       10,686             747
 B2B                                                9,900              1,607
 Revenue from contracts with customers (IFRS 15)    20,586             2,354

 Prize Draw Competitions                            40,165             28,776
 Online Casino and Online Sportsbook - Own brand    75,436             4,028
 Online Casino and Online Sportsbook - White label  34,144             2,932
 Income from gains/(losses) (IFRS 9)                149,745            35,736

 Total revenue                                      170,331            38,090

 

 

5.     Earnings per share

 

                                                     Year ended         Year ended    31 December  2024

                                                     31 December 2025
 Numerator                                           £'000              £'000
 Profit for the year and earnings used in basic EPS  3,808              4,360
 Earnings used in diluted EPS                        3,808              4,360

 

 

                                                        Year ended         Year ended    31 December  2024

                                                        31 December 2025
 Denominator                                            Number             Number
 Weighted average number of shares used in basic EPS    87,873,342         84,613,770
 Employee share options                                 49,229             -
 Weighted average number of shares used in diluted EPS  87,922,571         84,613,770

 

For further information on share options see note 24. The comparative
denominator has been restated to reflect the share division in the year.

 

 

6.     Segmental reporting

The Chief Operating Decision Maker ("CODM") is responsible for allocating
resources and assessing the performance of the Group. The CODM is considered
to be the key management personnel (defined in note 9) following the Group's
listing.

 

The CODM separately reviews the performance of three operating segments: Prize
Draw Competitions, Online Gaming and Corporate costs. Results of these
segments are reviewed by the CODM down to an Adjusted EBITDA level, with
subsequent items not allocated by segment. A reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA
to Profit from operations is presented together with the Statement of
Comprehensive Income.

                           Prize Draw Competitions   Online Gaming   Corporate   Total
 2025                      £'000                     £'000           £'000       £'000
 Gross revenue             77,933                    130,029         -           207,962
 Less: competition prizes  (37,631)                  -               -           (37,631)
 Net revenue               40,302                    130,029         -           170,331

 Adjusted EBITDA           9,634                     24,892          (3,340)     31,186

 

                           Prize Draw Competitions   Online Gaming   Corporate   Total
 2024                      £'000                     £'000           £'000       £'000
 Gross revenue             44,083                    9,314           -           53,397
 Less: competition prizes  (15,307)                  -               -           (15,307)
 Net revenue               28,776                    9,314           -           38,090

 Adjusted EBITDA           4,049                     2,554           -           6,603

 

Reporting of assets or liabilities by segment is no longer presented to the
CODM, as such no analysis has been presented.

 

7.     Adjusting items

                                Year ended         Year ended

                                31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                £'000              £'000
 Corporate restructuring costs  266                457
 IPO Costs                      8,167              -
 IPO Bonus                      4,224              -
 Acquisition of Click           269                -
 Share option expense           30                 -
 Supplier termination costs     511                -
                                13,467             457

 

 

The Group incurred corporate restructure costs in the year, primarily relating
to strategic decisions relating to market changes, and the related contractual
costs. The Group incurred corporate restructure costs in the prior year
primarily relating to the Group formation and acquisition of the Crowd Group.

 

The Group incurred costs relating to the successful listing of the Company in
the year, together with the acquisition of Click (see note 26). These costs
include professional fees and other expenses directly associated with the
acquisition, and a one-off bonus specifically granted for the listing.

 

Share-based payment charges are treated as adjusting items as they are
non-cash in nature and do not impact the Group's short-term liquidity or
cash-generating ability.

 

During the year, the Group incurred one-off costs in connection with a
supplier insolvency, relating to the settlement of pre-existing third-party
claims on previously acquired assets. The costs do not reflect the Group's
normal operating cost structure.

 

8.     Expenses by nature

 

 Profit from operations is stated after charging:            Year ended         Year ended

                                                             31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                                             £'000              £'000
 Depreciation (note 12)                                      466                57
 Depreciation of right-of-use assets (note 15)               731                51
 Amortisation of intangible assets (note 13)                 4,511              53
 Legal and professional fees                                 1,616              72
 Adjusting items (note 7)                                    13,467             457
 Auditor's remuneration:
 Audit services
 -     Fees payable for the audit of the Parent Company      350                120
 -     Fees payable for the audit of subsidiaries            195                -
 Non-audit services
 -     Reporting accountant work (IPO)                       2,030
 -     Other non-audit services                              17                 -

 

9.     Employees and Directors

 

 Total payroll costs (including Directors and key management) comprise:  Year ended         Year ended     31 December

                                                                         31 December 2025   2024
                                                                         £'000              £'000
 Wages and salaries                                                      11,270             2,584
 Social security contributions and similar taxes                         671                258
 Other pension costs                                                     153                68
 Termination benefits                                                    67                 133
 Share-based payment                                                     30                 -
 Other employee benefits                                                 359                47
                                                                         12,550             3,090

 

 

 The average number of people (including Directors) employed by the Group:  Year ended    Year ended    31 December 2024

                                                                            31 December

                                                                            2025
 Prize Draw Competitions                                                    41            23
 Online Gaming                                                              204           13
 Corporate                                                                  9             3
                                                                            254           39

 

 

 Director emoluments comprise:                    Year ended    Year ended   31 December 2024

                                                  31 December

                                                  2025
                                                  £'000         £'000
 Directors' remuneration                          450           556
 Transaction bonus                                130           -
 Social security contributions and similar taxes  71            73
 Pension contributions to money purchase schemes  13            14
                                                  664           643

 

There were 2 Directors participating in money purchase pension schemes as at
the year ended 31 December 2025 (December 2024: 2)

 

 

The key management personnel of the Group consists of the Company's Directors
and a limited number of senior management personnel who have authority and
responsibility for planning, directing, and controlling the Group's
activities.

 

 

 Key management personnel remuneration comprise:  Year ended    Year ended   31 December 2024

                                                  31 December

                                                  2025
                                                  £'000         £'000
 Remuneration                                     1,093         556
 Transaction bonus                                256           -
 Social security contributions and similar taxes  114           73
 Pension contributions to money purchase schemes  13            14
                                                  1,476         643

 

 

 Remuneration of the highest paid Director comprise:  Year ended          31 December    2025              Year ended        31 December 2024
                                                      £'000                                                £'000
 Emoluments                                           195                                                  266
 Social security contributions and similar taxes      30                                                   35
 Pension contributions to money purchase schemes      10                                                   10
                                                      235                                                  311

 

In addition to the amounts presented in the above tables, a transaction bonus
of €500,000 (£429,000) was paid to Keyplay Holdings Limited, a company
wholly owned by members of key management personnel, including a Director, and
an additional transaction bonus of €500,000 (£429,000) was paid to Romemma
Limited, a company wholly owned by members of key management personnel.

 

10.  Finance income and expense

                                                               Year ended     Year ended    31 December 2024

                                                           31 December

                                                           2025
                                                           £'000              £'000
 Finance income
 Deposit account interest                                  407                162
                                                           407                162

 Finance expense
 Interest on bank borrowings                               2,516              81
 Interest on lease liabilities                             378                23
 Foreign exchange loss on financing liabilities (note 29)  816                -
 Unwind of discount on deferred consideration (note 26)    286                -
 Other finance expenses                                    465                -
                                                           4,461              104

 

 

11.  Taxation

 

The Group's tax expense for the year ended 31 December 2025 reflects the tax
position of the Company and its subsidiaries. The Group operates in multiple
jurisdictions with varying tax rates, which impact the effective tax rate.

 

Tax rates are based on standard corporate tax rates enacted or substantively
enacted at 31 December 2025.

                                          Year ended         Year ended

                                          31 December 2025   31 December

                                                             2024
                                          £'000              £'000
 Analysis of tax expense
 Current tax:
 UK current tax on profits for the year   969                1,530
 Adjustments in respect of prior periods  32                 -
 Foreign tax on income for the year       3,165              -
 Total current tax                        4,166              1,530
 Deferred tax
 Other movement                           (447)              (126)
 Total deferred tax                       (447)              (126)

 Total tax charge for the period          3,719              1,404

 

 Reconciliation of tax expense and tax based on accounting profits:

                                                                     Year ended          31 December            Year ended

                                                                     2025                                       31 December 2024
                                                                     £'000                                      £'000
 Profit on ordinary activities before income tax                     8,892                                      6,034
 Tax using the Group's domestic tax rates of 25% (2024: 24.5%)       2,223                                      1,478
 Effects of:
 Non-deductible expenses                                             1,421                                      (27)
 Share of results of associates                                      (283)                                      -
 Difference in foreign tax rates                                     (1,100)                                    -
 Deferred tax assets not recognised                                  41                                         -
 Uncertain tax position provision                                    1,417                                      11
 Other tax movements                                                 -                                          (58)
 Tax expense for the period                                          3,719                                      1,404

 

The Group operates in multiple jurisdictions with varying tax rates, which
impact the effective tax rate.

 

Deferred tax

 

Deferred tax assets

The following is the analysis of the deferred tax assets (after offset of a
deferred tax liability related to right-of-use assets) for financial reporting
purposes.

                                                        Year ended    Year ended

                                                        31 December   31 December

                                                        2025          2024
                                                        £'000         £'000
 At the start of the period                             315           -
 Acquired on business combination                       -             180
 Movement in the period recognised in income statement  (2)           135
 At the end of the period                               313           315

                                                        Year ended    Year ended

                                                        31 December   31 December

                                                        2025          2024
                                                        £'000         £'000
 Losses and tax credits carried forward                 273           273
 Employee-related accruals                              1             2
 Leases (net)                                           39            40
                                                        313           315

 

The deferred tax asset related to leases is after the offset of deferred tax
liabilities of £748,000 (2024: £583,000) on right-of-use assets against
deferred tax assets on lease liabilities of £787,000 (2024: £623,000).

Deferred tax liabilities

                                                      Year ended           Year ended     31 December 2024

                                                      31 December  2025
                                                      £'000                £'000
 At the start of the year                             268                  260
 Acquired through business combination                1,688                -
 Movement in the year recognised in income statement  (459)                8
 At the end of the year                               1,497                268

 

                                Year ended    Year ended

                                31 December   31 December

                                2025          2024
                                £'000         £'000
 Intangible assets              1,410         -
 Property, plant and equipment  87            268
                                1,497         268

 

 

12     Property, plant and equipment

 

                             Long leasehold  Improvements to property  Computer equipment  Motor vehicles                               Total

                             £'000           £'000                     £'000               £'000           Fixtures  and fittings      £'000

                                                                                                           £'000

 Cost
 At 1 January 2024           954             61                        97                  35              72                        1,219
 Additions                   -                458                      17                  44              -                         519
 Common control transaction  -               1,715                     236                 50              41                        2,042
 Disposals                   -               (10)                      -                   (29)            (72)                      (111)
 At 31 December 2024         954             2,224                     350                 100             41                        3,669
 Depreciation
 At 1 January 2024           26              8                         80                  16              58                        188
 Charge for the period       4               21                        18                  13              1                         57
 Disposals                   -               (2)                       -                   (13)            (58)                      (73)
 At 31 December 2024         30              27                        98                  16              1                         172
 Net book amount
 At 31 December 2024         924             2,197                     252                 84              40                        3,497

 Cost
 At 1 January 2025           954             2,224                     350                 100             41                        3,669
 Additions                   -               275                       404                 1               -                         680
 Business combination        -               64                        22                  33              14                        133
 Disposals                   -               -                         -                   (68)            -                         (68)
 Foreign exchange            -               132                       28                  -               3                         163
 At 31 December 2025         954             2,695                     804                 66              58                        4,577
 Depreciation
 At 1 January 2025           30              27                        98                  16              1                         172
 Charge for the period       3               230                       172                 49              12                        466
 Disposals                   -               -                         -                   (31)            -                         (31)
 Foreign exchange            -               18                        16                  -               1                         35
 At 31 December 2025         33              275                       286                 34              14                        642
 Net book amount
 At 31 December 2025         921             2,420                     518                 32              44                        3,935

 

Depreciation was recognised in the income statement within administrative
expenses. There are no charges over the Group's tangible fixed assets.

 

For business combinations in the year see note 26. The common control
transaction relates to the acquisition of Crowd in the previous year (see note
26).

 

 

13     Intangible assets

                        Goodwill  Domains and Brands  Customer lists  Software licenses                           Total

                        £'000     £'000               £'000           £'000              Platform technology     £'000

                                                                                         £'000

 Cost
 At 1 January 2024      -         -                   -               -                  582                   582
 Additions              -         -                   -               95                 7,966                 8,061
 At 31 December 2024    -         -                   -               95                 8,548                 8,643
 Amortisation
 At 1 January 2024      -         -                   -               -                  486                   486
 Charge for the period  -         -                   -               2                  51                    53
 At 31 December 2024    -         -                   -               2                  537                   539
 Net book amount
 At 31 December 2024    -         -                   -               93                 8,011                 8,104

 Cost
 At 1 January 2025      -         -                   -               95                 8,548                 8,643
 Additions              -         7                   2,571           -                  2,290                 4,868
 Business combination   6,154     6,132               488             -                  4                     12,778
 Foreign exchange       -         -                   50              5                  470                   525
 At 31 December 2025    6,154     6,139               3,109           100                11,312                26,814
 Amortisation
 At 1 January 2025      -         -                   -               2                  537                   539
 Charge for the period  -         819                 591             35                 3,066                 4,511
 Foreign exchange       -         -                   8               1                  59                    68
 At 31 December 2025    -         819                 599             38                 3,662                 5,118
 Net book amount
 At 31 December 2025    6,154     5,320               2,510           62                 7,650                 21,696

 

 

For business combinations in the year see note 26.

 

Internal development costs capitalised in the year totalled £2,266,000 (2024:
£nil).

 

Amortisation is recognised in the consolidated statement of profit and loss
within administrative expenses. There are no charges over the Group's
intangible fixed assets.

 

The Group is required to test, on an annual basis, whether goodwill has
suffered any impairment. The recoverable amount is determined based on value
in use calculations. The use of this method requires the estimation of future
cash flows and the determination of a discount rate in order to calculate the
present value of the cash flows.

 

Goodwill relates fully to the Click acquisition in the year. An impairment
test on the Click CGU has been performed at the reporting date. The
recoverable amount of the CGU has been determined from value-in-use
calculations based on two-year cash flow projections prepared by management.
The post-tax discount rate applied was 16%, the long-term growth rate applied
was 2%. No reasonably possible change in the key assumptions would result in
impairment of the CGU.

 

There are no indefinite life assets other than goodwill.

 

 

 

14     Other non-current assets

                  31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                  £'000              £'000
 Restricted cash  5,050              4,843

 

 

As at the reporting date, the Group holds restricted cash totalling
£5,050,000 (2024: £4,843,000), classified as non-current due to restrictions
on its use with expected realisation beyond 12 months. This balance includes
£2,000,000 held as a guarantee required by the bank in connection with a
£41,500,000 loan facility held by the Company. This amount is accessible and
repayable only upon full repayment of the loan. See further details on the
loan in note 29.

 

The remaining balance of £3,050,000 (€3,500,000) (2024: £2,843,000
(€3,500,000)) is held by the Crowd Group to comply with gambling legislation
requirements. The cash is held either on restricted accounts with commercial
banks to facilitate bank guarantees, or directly with government agencies. The
cash balances are either inaccessible while the licences are held or
inaccessible within 3 months.

 

15     Leased assets

                          31 December 2025     31 December 2024
 Number of active leases  21                 15

 

The leases range in length from 2 to 10 years depending on lease type. All
lease payments are fixed over the lease term, with no variable payment
elements capitalised as part of the right-of-use assets. The measurement of
lease liabilities at 31 December 2025 reflects all expected future cash
outflows.

 

Extension, termination, and break options

The Group sometimes negotiates extension, termination, or break clauses in its
leases. In determining the lease term, management considers all facts and
circumstances that create an economic incentive to exercise an extension
option or not exercise a termination option. Extension options (or periods
after termination options) are only included in the lease term if the lease is
reasonably certain to be extended (or not terminated).

On a case-by-case basis, the Group will consider whether the absence of a
break clause would expose the Group to excessive risk. Typically, factors
considered in deciding to negotiate a break clause include:

-       The length of the lease term;

-       The economic stability of the environment in which the property
is located; and

-       Whether the location represents a new area of operations for the
Group.

Incremental borrowing rate

The Group has adopted a rate with a range of 5.00% - 8.95% as its incremental
borrowing rate, being the rate that the individual lessee would have to pay to
borrow the funds necessary to obtain an asset of similar value to the
right-of-use asset in a similar economic environment with similar terms,
security and conditions. This rate is used to reflect the risk premium over
the borrowing cost of the Group measured by reference to the Group's
facilities.

Right-of-use assets

 

                                   Leasehold property  Motor vehicles and equipment     Total

                                   £'000               £'000                           £'000
 Cost
 At 1 January 2024                 -                   -                             -
 Acquired in business combination  3,592               27                            3,619
 At 31 December 2024               3,592               27                            3,619
 Depreciation
 At 1 January 2024                 -                   -                             -
 Charge for the period             50                  1                             51
 At 31 December 2024               50                  1                             51
 Net book value
 At 31 December 2024               3,542               26                            3,568

 

 

                        Leasehold property  Motor vehicles and equipment     Total

                        £'000               £'000                           £'000
 Cost
 At 1 January 2025      3,592               27                            3,619
 Business combinations  377                 -                             377
 Additions              3,563               87                            3,650
 Foreign exchange       213                 (3)                           210
 Lease termination      (11)                -                             (11)
 At 31 December 2025    7,734               111                           7,845
 Depreciation
 At 1 January 2025      50                  1                             51
 Charge for the period  712                 19                            731
 Foreign exchange       14                  (5)                           9
 At 31 December 2025    776                 15                            791
 Net book value
 At 31 December 2025    6,958               96                            7,054

 

 

Lease liabilities

 

                      Leasehold Property  Motor Vehicles and Equipment     Total

                      £'000               £'000                           £'000
 At 1 January 2024    -                   -                             -
 Additions            3,775               27                            3,802
 Interest expense     23                  -                             23
 Lease payments       (7)                 (1)                           (8)
 At 31 December 2024  3,791               26                            3,817

 

 

                                   Leasehold property  Motor vehicles and equipment     Total

                                   £'000               £'000                           £'000
 At 1 January 2025                 3,791               26                            3,817
 Acquired in business combination  377                 -                             377
 Additions                         3,563               87                            3,650
 Interest expense                  376                 2                             378
 Lease payments                    (859)               (36)                          (895)
 Lease termination                 (11)                -                             (11)
 Foreign exchange                  215                 2                             217
 At 31 December 2025               7,452               81                            7,533

 

 

Reconciliation of minimum lease payments and present value

                                         31 December  31 December

                                         2025         2024

                                         £'000        £'000
 Within 1 year                           1,050        786
 More than 1 year and less than 5 years  4,735        2,792
 After 5 years                           3,962        1,310
 Total including interest cash flows     9,747        4,888
 Less: interest cash flows               (2,214)      (1,071)
 Total principal cash flows              7,533        3,817

 

Reconciliation of current and non-current lease liabilities

                        31 December  31 December

                        2025         2024

                        £'000        £'000
 Current                589          367
 Non-current            6,944        3,450
 Total lease liability  7,533        3,817

 

16     Investments in associates

 

 Group                             31 December 2025  31 December 2024

                                   £'000             £'000
 At 1 January                      2,915             -
 Additions                         -                 2,855
 Dividends receivable              (975)             -
 Share of profits                  1,133             60
 Foreign exchange recorded in OCI  159               -
 At 31 December                    3,232             2,915

 

The Group owns a 35% holding in each of Exalogic and Exalogic Sistemi
(together the "Exalogic Companies"), as well as two call options, which grant
the right to acquire additional equity stakes in the Exalogic Companies. The
principal place of business and incorporation of the Exalogic Companies is
Italy.

 

The Group assessed its investment in the Exalogic Companies under IFRS 10 and
concluded that it does not control the Exalogic Companies, as it lacks power
over relevant activities given that the call options are not yet exercisable
and thus its voting rights remain at 35%. The investment is accounted for as
an equity accounted associate under IAS 28 due to significant influence and
the call options are classified as derivative financial instruments. The call
options are included within derivative financial assets (note 17).

 

The fair value of the 35% interest acquired exceeded the cost of the
acquisition due to unrecognised goodwill.

 

£379,000 of the dividends receivable remain unpaid at year end.

 

Summarised financial information on Exalogic is detailed below:

                                      £'000
 At 31 December 2025
 Current assets                       7,322
 Non-current assets                   510
 Current liabilities                  (4,130)
 Non-current liabilities              (282)

 For the year ended 31 December 2025
 Revenue                              14,177
 Profit from continuing operations    3,238
 Total comprehensive income           3,238

 

17     Derivative financial asset

                                              31 December 2025   31 December 2024

                                              £'000              £'000
 Call options relating to Exalogic Companies  477                586
 Call options relating to Crowd               1,633              -
                                              2,110              586

 

Call options relating to Exalogic Companies

The Group has two call options over its 35% associate, Exalogic Companies.
Details of the Group's investment in Exalogic Companies is included in note
16.

The terms of the call options are as follows:

Call Option 1

Call Option 1 grants the right to acquire an additional 35% stake, increasing
the shareholding from 35% to 70%. Call Option 1 is only exercisable once
trailing 12-month EBITDA exceeds €7m; this has not yet been achieved and,
therefore, the call option is not yet able to be exercised. The call option
has been renegotiated in the year, increasing the EBITDA threshold.

The Call Option 1 exercise price is calculated as follows:

•      4.5 multiplied by the greater of (i) €7m; or (ii) the
aggregate EBITDA of the Exalogic Companies for the 12-month period ended prior
to notice being given on the intention to exercise the option; plus

•      The net assets/debt of the Exalogic Companies as at the
month-end prior to notice being given by the Group;

•      Multiplied by 35%.

If any dividends are paid by the Exalogic Companies between the notice date
and exercise date, the net assets/debt of the Exalogic Companies will be
reduced by the value of the dividends.

 

Call Option 2

Following the exercise of Call Option 1, the Group has the right to acquire
the remaining equity stake in the Exalogic Companies. Call Option 2 may be
exercised at any time after the exercise of Call Option 1.

The Call Option 2 exercise price is calculated as follows:

•      4.5 multiplied by the EBITDA of the Exalogic Companies for the
12-month period ended prior to notice being given to the sellers (with a floor
of €5m if EBITDA is below this amount); plus

•      The net assets/debt of the Exalogic Companies as at the month
end prior to notice being given by the Group;

•      Multiplied by 30%.

If any dividends are paid by the Exalogic Companies between the notice date
and exercise date, the net assets/debt of the Exalogic Companies will be
reduced by the value of the dividends.

 

The fair value of each call option are presented below:

                      Call Option 1  Call Option 2  Total fair value
                      £'000          £'000          £'000
 At 31 December 2025  196            281            477
 At 31 December 2024  316            270            586

 

 

Call options relating to Crowd Services Limited ("Crowd")

 

During the year, the Group entered into two call options over the remaining
4.14% equity interest in Crowd, for £nil consideration, through a transaction
under common control.

 

Call Option 1

 

The option relates to a right to acquire 2.68% of Crowd, and can be exercised
on, or before, the 10(th) anniversary from the signing date (September 2025).
Consideration payable is based on 2.68% of 3x EBITDA of specific business
units within Crowd for the last twelve months prior to the exercise date. The
option was in the money at inception  and accordingly a derivative financial
asset was recognised at its fair value through other reserves.

 

Call Option 2

 

The option gives the Group the right to acquire 1.46% of Crowd. It was entered
into in the year and can be exercised for £1,220,000 at any time once the
EBITDA of the business exceeds €3m per month. The value of the option was
negligible at inception and at the reporting date.

 

18     Inventories

 

                     31 December 2025   31 December 2024

                     £'000              £'000
 Competition prizes  2,840              631

 

The cost of Group inventories recognised as an expense in year ended 31
December 2025 amounted to £37,777,000 (2024: £15,307,000). This is
recognised within net revenue.

 

19     Trade and other receivables

                    31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                    £'000              £'000
 Trade receivables  6,824              4,863
 Other receivables  2,600              1,026
 Prepayments        1,102              1,347
 Contract assets    142                127
                    10,668             7,363

 

The fair value of trade and other receivables approximates to their carrying
values.

In the Prize Draw Competitions segment, trade receivables relate to payment
processor payments. As payment is due immediately upon customer purchase of a
competition ticket and the Group does not offer any credit terms, no
significant trade receivables arise beyond those associated with payment
processor transactions.

In the Online Gaming segment, trade receivables relate to the Crowd Group's
business-to-business ("B2B") services and processor balances that represent
funds held by third-party payment providers before settled to the Group's bank
accounts.

Expected Credit Loss ("ECL")

The Group identified no specific bad debt provisions required. The Group
calculated an ECL using the simplified approach under IFRS 9, based on
reasonable and supportable information. For the remaining balances, customers
demonstrated a consistent and reliable payment history, and any additional ECL
was determined to be immaterial to the Group's financial position due to the
short-term nature and low credit risk of these receivables.

The following table details the aging and risk profiles of trade receivables:

                            < 30     31-60    6190     > 90     Total Gross  ECL      Total Net

                            £'000    £'000    £'000    £'000    £'000        £'000    £'000
 Expected credit loss rate  0%       0%       0%       0%       0%           -        0%
 31 December 2024           4,146    36       30       1,048    5,260        (397)    4,863
 31 December 2025           6,067    41       147      707      6,962        (138)    6,824

 

20     Cash and cash equivalents

 

               31 December 2025   31 December 2024
               £'000              £'000
 Cash at bank  63,009             20,144

 

Cash and cash equivalents excludes restricted cash at 31 December 2025 of
£5,050,000 (31 December 2024: £4,843,000), which has been recognised in
other non-current assets. See note 14 for more details.

 

21     Trade and other payables

                         31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                         £'000              £'000
 Trade creditors         13,393             6,793
 Indirect taxes payable  7,112              5,486
 Accruals                6,553              6,633
 Players balances        3,805              3,614
 Contract liabilities    300                55
 Other creditors         1,457              1,071
                         32,620             23,652

 

The Directors consider that the carrying value of trade and other payables
approximates to their fair value. Trade payables are non-interest bearing and
are normally settled monthly. Included within other creditors are competition
liabilities, pension credits and outstanding social security balances.

 

22     Other financial liabilities

                                          31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                          £'000              £'000
 Game credits and competitions liability  266                310

 

23     Share capital

                                                           31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                                           £'000              £'000
 Allotted, called up and fully paid
 Opening nominal value of 5p ordinary shares               423                423
 Shares issued during the year                             103                -
 Closing nominal value of 0.5p (2024: 5p) ordinary shares  526                423

 

                                                       31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                                       Number             Number
 Allotted, called up and fully paid
 Opening number of 5p ordinary shares                  8,461,376          8,461,376
 Shares issued as part of debt for equity transaction  1                  -
 Subdivision of shares from 5p to 0.5p                 76,152,393         -
 Shares issued on 3 November 2025                      20,512,820         -
 Closing number of 0.5p (2024: 5p) ordinary shares     105,126,590        8,461,376

 

During the year, the Company subdivided its shares, with each 5p share
subdivided into 10 0.5p shares.

On 8 April 2025, the Company completed a debt-to-equity conversion relating to
a £25,220,000 (equivalent to €30,400,000) liability owed to its UBO as of
31 December 2024. See note 29 for further information.

On 3 November 2025, the Company issued 20,512,820 ordinary shares at £1.95
per share.

 

All share classes rank pari passu, including voting and distribution rights
and repayment of capital in the event of winding up.

 

 Share premium

                                                    31 December 2025   31 December 2024
                                                    £'000              £'000
 At the start of the year                           622                622
 Debt for equity transaction                        26,036             -
 Shares issued in the year                          39,897             -
 Issue costs relating to shares issued in the year  (1,493)            -
 At the end of the year                             65,062             622

 

 

24     Share-based payment

 

Share Option Plan

 

The equity-settled Share Option Plan was adopted by the Company on 27 October
2025. The Share Option Plan consists of two separate plans called The Winvia
Entertainment plc (Employees) Share Option Plan (the "Employees Plan") and The
Winvia Entertainment plc (Consultants) Share Option Plan (the "Consultants
Plan"). The terms of the two plans are the same save that only employees of
the Group are eligible to participate in the Employees Plan and only
consultants are eligible to participate in the Consultants Plan. The Share
Option Plan may be used to grant options to acquire ordinary shares.

1,009,201 share options were subsequently granted, which all remained
outstanding at year-end. The majority of the share options follow a vesting
profile where 25% vest after one year, with the balance vesting in equal
six-monthly periods over the next three years. The exercise price of options
issued in the year was £1.95 and the fair value at grant date was £713,505.
The total expense recognised in the income statement for the year relating to
the share options was £29,730, with a corresponding credit to equity -
share-based payment reserve.

The fair value of the options was determined at the grant date using the
Black-Scholes option pricing model, taking into account the share price,
expected volatility, risk-free interest rate, expected life of the options,
and expected dividend yield. Expected volatility is estimated based on
historic volatility of guideline companies in the industry.

No options were exercisable at the reporting date nor have been exercised in
the year. The vesting of options may be subject to the achievement of
performance conditions set at the time of grant.

An option may only be exercised to the extent vested and must be exercised
within ten years from its grant. An option (whether vested or not) will lapse
if the participant ceases to be in service due to cause. If service is
terminated without cause then vested options may be exercised within 90 days
of termination. If termination is the result of the death of the participant
then vested options may be exercised within 12 months of death.

 

25     Subsidiaries

 

The Company has two direct subsidiaries as at 31 December 2025. Crowd Services
Limited (incorporated in Gibraltar), of which it owns 95.86% of the issued
shares, and Click Competitions Limited (incorporated in England and Wales), of
which it owns 100%.

Crowd Services Limited directly and indirectly owns 100% of the issued shares
of all other subsidiaries of the Group, apart from WindGG Holdings Ltd, in
which it owns a 60% shareholding, as at 31 December 2025.

The table below sets out the details of the active subsidiaries under the
control of Crowd Services Limited.

  Subsidiaries                     Country of incorporation    Proportion of ordinary shares .held at 31 December 2025
  Crowd Interactive Holding Ltd    Malta                       95.86% indirect holding
  Crowd Entertainment Ltd          Malta                       95.86% indirect holding
  Stellar Development SRL          Romania                     95.86% indirect holding
  OmniPlay SRL                     Romania                     95.86% indirect holding
  WOW Intl.                        Cyprus                      95.86% indirect holding
  Sky Data Services SRL            Romania                     95.86% indirect holding
  360 Operational Services Ltd     Malta                       95.86% indirect holding
  SW Globe Hosting SRL             Romania                     95.86% indirect holding
  WindGG Holdings Ltd              Malta                       57.52% indirect holding
  WindGG International Ltd         Malta                       57.52% indirect holding

 

Business disposals

In September 2025, the Group divested the non-core companies of Viral
Interactive Limited and Best of the Best Limited (formerly known as Crowd
Services UK Limited) for consideration of £1,000.

 

 

26     Business combinations

 

On 3 April 2025, Winvia acquired 100% of the share capital of Click
Competitions Limited, a UK-based company in the competitions and prize draw
market, for total consideration of £16,424,000, of which £5,600,000 was
deferred for 12 months. The business combination was made as part of the
Group's strategy to increase its presence in this sector. The fair values of
the assets acquired and liabilities assumed is detailed below:

                                Fair value
                                £'000
 Property, plant and equipment  133
 Intangible assets (note 13)    6,624
 Right-of-use assets            377
 Total non-current assets       7,134

 Cash and cash equivalents      1,400
 Inventories                    2,158
 Loan receivables               3,360
 Trade and other receivables    183
 Total current assets           7,101

 Trade and other payables       (2,185)
 Lease liabilities              (377)
 Total current liabilities      (2,562)

 Deferred tax liability         (1,688)
 Total non-current liabilities  (1,688)
 Net assets acquired            9,985

 

                                          £'000
 Consideration transferred                16,139
 Less: fair value of net assets acquired  (9,985)
 Goodwill (note 13)                       6,154

 
 Purchase consideration                             £'000
 Cash consideration paid on completion              7,630
 Net debt and working capital adjustment            (165)
 Settlement of outstanding directors loan accounts  3,360
 Deferred cash consideration                        5,600
 Impact of discounting deferred consideration       (286)
 Total consideration                                16,139

 

 

 Analysis of cash flows on acquisition    £'000
 Cash consideration paid on completion    (7,630)
 Net debt and working capital adjustment  165
 Cash acquired at acquisition             1,400
 Net cash outflow on acquisition          (6,065)

 

 

Acquisition costs were £269,000 and are recognised as an expense in the
consolidated statement of comprehensive income. They have been presented
within adjusting items (Note 7). Deferred consideration of £5,600,000 was
discounted to its present value on acquisition of £5,314,000.

 

From the acquisition date to 31 December 2025, the acquiree contributed
revenue of £5,528,000 and profit of £578,000 to the Group. If the
acquisition had occurred on 1 January 2025, Group revenue would have been
£173,005,000 and Group profit after taxation would be £5,995,000.

 

Business combinations in previous periods

 

On 11 December 2024, the Group acquired 95.86% of the equity interest in
Crowd, and its subsidiary undertakings through a transaction under common
control, for maximum total consideration of £43,654,000 (approximately
€52,244,000).

 

There has been no changes to the recognition or measurement of the acquisition
of Crowd in the year.

 

27     Non-controlling interest ("NCI")

 

The Group owns 95.86% of Crowd resulting in a 4.14% non-controlling interest.
Crowd owns 60% of WindGG resulting in a 40% non-controlling interest. These
non-controlling interests have been reported in aggregate below.

 

The following table summarises the NCI's share of key metrics. For the
comparative period, the results relate to the period post-acquisition of the
Crowd Group on 20 December 2024.

                                     Year ended         Year ended

                                     31 December 2025   31 December 2024

                                     £'000              £'000
 Profit for the period               1,365              270
 Other comprehensive income          24                 (1)
 Total comprehensive income          1,389              269

 

 

 At 31 December 2025

                                     Crowd Group (less WindGG)   WindGG    Total Crowd Group

                                     £'000                       £'000     £'000
 Non-current assets                  19,145                      2,708     21,853
 Current assets                      20,759                      11,628    32,387
 Non-current liabilities             (4,405)                     -         (4,405)
 Current liabilities                 (21,549)                    (10,146)  (31,695)
 Net assets                          13,950                      4,190     18,140
 Total non-controlling interest      578                         1,676     2,254

 

 

 At 31 December 2024

                                     Crowd Group (less WindGG)   WindGG   Total Crowd Group

                                     £'000                       £'000    £'000
 Non-current assets                  5,244                       1,658    6,902
 Current assets                      19,711                      7,959    27,670
 Non-current liabilities             (1,861)                     (1,575)  (3,436)
 Current liabilities                 (27,466)                    (5,539)  (33,005)
 Net (liabilities)/assets            (4,372)                     2,503    (1,869)
 Total non-controlling interest      (181)                       1,001    820

 

 

The movement on the non-controlling interest reserve relates to:

                                                Year ended

                                                31 December       Year ended

                                                2025              31 December

                                                £'000             2024

                                                                  £'000
 Opening balance                                820      -
 NCI share of comprehensive income              1,389    270
 Capitalisation of waived debts                 569      -
 Dividends paid to NCI                          (524)
 NCI share of net liabilities at acquisition    -        550
 Closing balance                                2,254    820

 

Capitalisation of waived debts relates to £13,744,000 that was owed to the
Company from its subsidiary, Crowd Services Ltd. See note 8 to the Company
financial statements for further information.

 

28     Reserves

 

Share capital

Share capital represents the nominal value of shares that have been issued.

Share premium

Share premium represents any premiums received on issue of share capital. Any
transaction costs associated with the issue of shares are deducted from share
premium.

Share-based payment reserve

This reserve relates to the cumulative charge relating to unexpired share
options issued by the Company.

Capital redemption reserve

The capital redemption reserve arises on the redemption or purchase of the
Company's own shares out of distributable profits in accordance with the
requirements of the Companies Act. It represents a non-distributable reserve
equal to the nominal value of the shares redeemed or purchased.

Foreign exchange reserve

The foreign exchange reserve records the foreign exchange differences arising
on translation of investments in foreign controlled subsidiaries. Amounts are
classified to profit or loss when an entity is disposed of.

Other reserves

Other reserves arise from the difference between the cost of the investment
and the carrying value of net assets acquired under book value accounting
arising from the acquisition of Crowd Services Ltd in the prior year, and the
Crowd call option entered into during the year.

Retained earnings

Retained earnings relate to cumulative net gains and losses less distributions
made.

 

Non-controlling interests

Non-controlling interests relates to the cumulative net profit/(losses) and
exchange difference in relation to non-controlling interest.

29     Borrowings

                                      31 December 2024

                   31 December 2025
                   £'000              £'000
 Current
 Loans from UBO    -                  27,413
 Bank borrowings   4,560              29,318
                   4,560              56,731
 Non-current
 Bank borrowings   28,544             -

 Total borrowings  33,104             56,731

 

Loans from UBO

On 8 April 2025, the Company completed a debt-to-equity conversion relating to
a £25,220,000 (equivalent to €30,400,000) liability owed to the UBO as of
31 December 2024. This liability was extinguished by issuing equity
instruments (shares) to the shareholder. Due to foreign exchange fluctuations,
the equity instruments were issued at a value of £26,036,000 (equivalent to
€30,400,000), resulting in a £816,000 foreign exchange loss from the
carrying value of the liability.

Bank borrowings

 

On 11 December 2024, the Company entered into a loan agreement with Eurobank
Cyprus Ltd for a facility amount of up to £41,500,000. The loan was entered
into for the partial financing of the acquisition of 95.86% of the share
capital of the Crowd Group. The first drawdown under the facility occurred on
13 December 2024, with an amount of £29,246,000. In May 2025, the Company
drew down an additional £8,400,000 of the loan available in order to finance
the acquisition of Click.

 

The loan is repayable through 71 consecutive monthly instalments of £380,000,
followed by a final balloon payment at the end of the loan term. The loan
agreement was amended in September 2025 to remove a clause permitting the
lender to alter the term and repayment profile of the loan at any time.
Interest, fees, and other charges are payable monthly in addition to the
capital repayments. The applicable interest rate for each interest period is
based on a blended rate using the GBP Term SONIA rate and a deposit rate.

 

The loan agreement includes the following financial covenants:

 

-               The Group must maintain a ratio of net bank debt
to Adjusted EBITDA of no more than 4:1, to be tested annually starting from
the financial year ended 31 December 2025;

-               The Group must maintain a ratio of Adjusted
EBITDA to interest of more than 2:1, to be tested every six months starting
from the financial year ended 31 December 2025; and

-               The Group must maintain a ratio of net bank debt
to adjusted equity ratio of no less than 1:1, to be tested annually starting
from the financial year ended 31 December 2026.

 

30     Contingent liabilities

 

The Group operates in a number of jurisdictions in an industry where
governments have introduced, or are contemplating the introduction of, new
regulatory or fiscal arrangements that may impact on the Group's operations,
The Group monitors the prevailing regulatory and tax environments in its
jurisdictions and seeks to determine the applicability and impact of changes
on the Group. The Group bases its compliance with corporate tax, indirect tax
and gaming tax requirements on its interpretation of current legislation.

 

Given the continuing and developing nature of taxation for the industry and
for international groups more widely, there is judgment required to interpret
international tax laws and the methodology used to determine the amount of tax
charges, current and future, arising. Due to developing practice and potential
for alternative interpretations there is a risk that additional liabilities
could arise. Given the uncertainty and complexity of the application of tax
laws in the sector it is not feasible to reliably quantify the range of any
such other potential liabilities and therefore none has been disclosed.

 

Further, the Group is aware of the increasing interest in the applicability of
UK sales tax ('VAT'), or other possible duty tax, to the sale of tickets for
prize draw competitions in the United Kingdom. The Group has engaged with His
Majesty's Revenue and Customs ("HMRC") on this matter during the year and post
year-end.  The Group also identified a recent response to a Parliamentary
Question in February 2026 which stated that VAT should be applied to prize
competition businesses at the standard rate. The Group understands the current
industry practice is for prize draw competitions to be exempt from VAT and
also that HMRC is engaging with other operators across the sector specifically
in respect of this.

 

At this time, any definitive outcome, including the determination of the
applicability of any taxes, the period to which it would apply, and the
calculation basis thereof, is uncertain.  Based on professional advice taken
to date, the Directors believe it is appropriate to treat the prize draws as
exempt from VAT, however, recognise that there is increased risk and the
overall conclusion may be subject to further assessment by HMRC.
Accordingly, the Directors have determined that the risk around historic VAT
liabilities or other duty tax constitutes a contingent liability and have
therefore not recorded a provision. The contingent liability relates to both
the Best of the Best business and the acquired Click Competitions Limited for
which, if a liability were to arise, the Directors would consider enforcing
any warranties and indemnities available to them. The Directors, based on
professional advice taken, are not currently able to reliably estimate within
an acceptable range, if any, the potential outflow, should it be concluded
that VAT or another possible duty tax should be applied and therefore have not
disclosed an estimate of any potential outflow of economic benefit.

 

The Directors have not been able to reliably estimate this due to the range of
possible outcomes owing to uncertainty as to the period of assessment, the
nature of tax to be applied, the tax base used and any penalties or interest
that may apply. Whilst the Group expects progress on the matter throughout
2026 and 2027, the timing as to the ultimate determination of the
applicability of any taxes, and how this is achieved, is currently uncertain.

 

31     Commitments and contingencies

 

Guarantees

The Group has financial commitments under Romanian gambling law, requiring a
guaranteed deposit amount for potential corporation and gambling tax
liabilities in respect of its B2C businesses. To satisfy these requirements,
at the reporting date the Group has guarantees of RON 33,300,000
(approximately £5,500,000) and RON 9,500,000 (approximately £1,570,000)
respectively.

The Group engaged Smartown Investments SRL ("Smartown"), a related party
controlled by the Group's majority shareholder, to procure these bank
guarantees. The Group also indemnifies Smartown for any fees or losses if the
guarantees are called and acts as a guarantor for Smartown's obligations under
the bank letters, creating a cross-guarantee for its own potential tax
liabilities. There is no current risk identified with regard to potential tax
liabilities and therefore no liability has been recorded.

As at 31 December 2025, the guarantees had not been called.

32     Financial instruments

 

Financial assets

 

Financial assets measured at amortised cost comprise trade receivables, other
receivables and cash. It does not include prepayments or taxes receivable.
Financial assets measured at FVTPL include derivative financial assets
relating to the call options in the Exalogic Companies and Crowd.

                                                         As at               31 December 2025

                                                                                                             As at               31 December 2024
                                                         £'000                                               £'000
 Financial assets at amortised cost:
 Trade receivables                                       6,824                                               4,863
 Other receivables                                       1,500                                               1,026
 Cash and cash equivalents                               63,009                                              20,144
 Other non-current assets (restricted cash)              5,050                                               4,843
                                                         76,383                                              30,876

 Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss:
 Derivative financial assets                             2,110                                               586
                                                         2,110                                               586

 Total financial assets                                  78,493                                              31,462

 

Financial liabilities

Financial liabilities measured at amortised cost comprise trade and other
payables, accruals, lease liabilities, player balances and borrowings. It does
not include taxation and social security or contract liabilities. Financial
liabilities measured at FVTPL include the financial liability relating to the
outstanding game credit.

                                                                       As at                   31 December 2025

                                                                                                                                   As at               31 December 2024
                                                                       £'000                                                       £'000
 Financial liabilities at amortised cost:
 Trade and other payables                                              14,238                                                      7,966
 Accruals                                                              6,358                                                       6,633
 Lease liabilities                                                     7,533                                                       3,817
 Player balances                                                       3,805                                                       3,614
 Loans from UBO                                                        -                                                           27,413
 Deferred consideration                                                5,600                                                       -
 Bank loans                                                            33,104                                                      29,318
                                                                       70,638                                                      78,761

 Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss:
 Other financial liabilities (Game credit and competitions liability)  266                                                         310
                                                                       266                                                         310

 Total financial liabilities                                           71,099                                                      79,071

 

 

Fair value of financial assets and liabilities approximates to their carrying
value.

Fair value measurements

The Group measures certain financial instruments at fair value, classified
within the fair value hierarchy as follows:

·      Level 1: Quoted prices (unadjusted), in active markets for
identical assets or liabilities;

·      Level 2: Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1
that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly;
or

·      Level 3: Inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on
observable market data (unobservable inputs).

The Group holds two call options related to its 35% investment in the Exalogic
Companies and two call options over the remaining 4.14% equity interest in
Crowd, classified as derivative financial assets held at fair value through
profit or loss. These options were initially recognised at their book value
and remeasured to fair value at 31 December 2025.

The fair value hierarchy of financial instruments measured at fair value is
presented below:

                                          Fair value hierarchy level  As at                 31 December 2025

                                                                                                                              As at              31 December 2024
                                                                      £'000                                                   £'000
 Derivative financial assets:
 Exalogic Call Option 1                   Level 3                     196                                                     316
 Exalogic Call Option 2                   Level 3                     281                                                     270
 Crowd Call Option 1                      Level 3                     1,633                                                   -
 Crowd Call Option 2                      Level 3                     -                                                       -
                                                                      2,110                                                   586

 Financial liabilities
 Game credits and Competitions liability  Level 3                     266                                                     310

 

The following summarises the valuation methodologies and inputs used for
derivative assets categorised in Level 3. No reasonable change in the inputs
results in a material change to the fair value above.

 

 Financial instrument            Valuation methodologies   Unobservable inputs
  Derivative financial .assets   Expected cash flow model  Volatility, forecast EBITDA, valuation multiples
  Game credits                   Expected cash flow model  Redemption rates, player behaviour
  Competition liability          Expected cash flow model  Player behaviour, ticket sales, competition results

Capital risk management

The primary objective of the Group's capital management is to ensure that it
maintains a credit quality that enables the Group to raise funds at an
economic interest rate and to maintain healthy capital ratios in order to
support its business and maximise shareholder value. The Group considers its
capital to comprise equity and bank debt. The Group manages its capital
structure and makes adjustments to it in light of changes in economic
conditions. To maintain or adjust the capital structure, the Group may adjust
borrowings, return capital to shareholders, issue new shares or convert debt
to equity instruments.

The Group's funding policy is to raise funds to meet the Group's anticipated
requirements. The Group's borrowings are subject to externally imposed capital
requirements, including financial covenants such as maintaining specific
debt-to-Adjusted EBITDA and debt-to-equity ratios. The Group monitors
compliance with these covenants on an ongoing basis and, based on current
projections, expects to maintain significant headroom against these
requirements. The Board reviews the Group's capital structure and liquidity
periodically.

Financial risk management

The Group is exposed through its operation to the financial risks: credit
risk, market risk, interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk and liquidity
risk. Risk management is carried out by the Directors, supported by the
Group's finance teams. The Group uses financial instruments to provide
flexibility regarding its working capital requirements and to enable it to
manage specific financial risks to which it is exposed. The Group's risk
profile includes exposures from the prize competitions business, online
sportsbook, casino and poker revenue streams.

Credit risk

Credit risk arises from financial instruments that potentially expose the
Group to losses if counterparties fail to meet their obligations, primarily
cash and cash equivalents, player deposits and processor balances. The Group's
operations include the Prize Draw Competitions business and the Online Gaming
business, including online sportsbook, casino, and poker businesses.

The Group maintains cash and cash equivalents with reputable domestic and
foreign financial institutions selected for their high credit quality based on
investment-grade credit ratings. Although bank balances may exceed insured
limits, the Directors are confident in the creditworthiness of these
institutions, which include major banks with strong financial stability. The
Group performs periodic evaluations of counterparties' credit standing by
monitoring credit ratings, market data, and public information, adjusting
exposures to ensure that risks from lower-rated counterparties remain within
acceptable limits.

Crowd's online sportsbook, casino and poker businesses are predominantly
card-based, requiring players to deposit funds in advance of participating,
significantly reducing credit risk from player receivables. Processor
balances, representing funds held by payment processors for the Group's gaming
operations, are subject to credit risk. The Group mitigates this by partnering
with established payment processors with strong credit profiles and conducting
daily reconciliations to monitor credit trends and ensure timely settlement.

The Group applies the ECL model under IFRS 9 to assess impairment of financial
assets, such as processor balances and trade receivables. ECL provisions are
based on historical loss experience, counterparty credit ratings, and
forward-looking economic factors, with no material ECL losses recognised
during the year.

No single counterparty, including players or payment processors, accounted for
10% or more of the Group's revenue in the year, indicating no significant
concentration of credit risk.

 

Market risk

Market risk relates to the risk that changes in market prices, specifically
sports betting odds for the Group's online sportsbook and equity prices for
derivative financial instruments, will impact the Group's income or the fair
value of its financial instruments. Market risk management aims to control
exposures to within acceptable limits, while optimising returns, conducted
under the oversight of the Directors.

The Group's sportsbook operations involve offering betting odds, exposing the
Group to betting price risk, where mispriced odds or unexpected betting
outcomes could affect cash flows or jackpot liabilities. The Group mitigates
this risk through sophisticated odds-setting algorithms and real-time market
monitoring. The Group's casino and poker operations have fixed house edges,
minimising price risk exposure. Derivatives, comprising call options to
acquire additional equity in the Exalogic Companies and Crowd, expose the
Group to equity price risk, as their fair value is dependent on the underlying
companies' equity value.

The Group does not hold derivative financial instruments for speculative or
trading purposes. Market risk exposures are continually monitored, with limits
set to ensure volatility remains within the Group's risk appetite.

Interest rate risk

Interest rate risk is the risk that changes in market interest rates will
affect the Group's borrowing costs, impacting financial performance and cash
flows. This risk arises from borrowings with variable interest rates that
fluctuate with market conditions.

The Group's borrowings consist of a bank loan issued in GBP, under which the
applicable interest rate for each interest period is based on a blended rate
using the GBP Term SONIA rate and a deposit rate. As GBP Term SONIA is a
floating benchmark, the Group is exposed to fluctuations in market interest
rates over the life of the loan.

The Group monitors developments in interest rates on an ongoing basis. At
present, management does not consider the potential impact of reasonably
possible changes in interest rates to be significant to the Group's financial
performance or cash flows, and accordingly, no sensitivity analysis has been
presented.

Foreign exchange risk

 

The Group operates internationally and is exposed to currency risk arising on
financial instruments denominated in a currency other than the respective
functional currencies of the Group entities, which are primarily Euros,
Sterling and Romanian Leu. A change in exchange rates between the functional
currency and the currency in which a transaction is denominated increases or
decreases the expected amount of functional currency cash flows upon
settlement of the transaction. That increase or decrease in expected
functional currency cash flows is a foreign currency transaction gain or loss
and is included in determining net loss for the period in which the exchange
rate changes.

 

The primary financial instruments the Group holds in foreign currency relate
to cash and cash equivalents. The carrying value at the reporting date by
currency is summarised below.

                                        As at              As at             31 December 2024

                                        31 December 2025
                                        £'000              £'000
 Cash and cash equivalents by currency
 Pounds Sterling                        40,024             9,848
 Euro                                   12,534             6,774
 Romanian Leu                           10,435             3,506
 US Dollar                              16                 16
 Total                                  63,009             20,144

Sensitivity analysis

A 10% strengthening of the Sterling against the Group's primary currencies at
the respective reporting dates below would have increased/(decreased) equity
and profit or loss by the amounts shown below:

                         As at              As at                31 December 2024

                         31 December 2025

                         £'000              £'000
 Euro
 Effect on equity  +10%  1,253              2,290
 Effect on profit  +10%  (1,253)            (2,290)
                         -                  -
 Romanian Leu
 Effect on equity  +10%  1,043              154
 Effect on profit  +10%  (1,043)            (154)
                         -                  -

A 10% weakening of the Sterling against the Group's primary currencies at the
respective reporting dates would have an equal but opposite effect on the
amounts shown above.

Liquidity risk

The Group maintains sufficient cash balances to meet its operational and
strategic objectives. The Directors and management review cash flow forecasts
on a regular basis to ensure the Group has sufficient cash reserves to meet
future working capital requirements, settle financial liabilities as they fall
due and to take advantage of business opportunities.

A maturity analysis of the Group's undiscounted cash flows arising from
financial liabilities is shown below:

 

                                          As at                 31 December 2025

                                                                                                  As at             31 December 2024
                                          £'000                                                   £'000
 Less than 1 year:
 Trade and other payables                 24,667                                                  18,523
 Deferred consideration                   5,600                                                   -
 Bank borrowings                          6,266                                                   56,731
 Lease liabilities                        1,046                                                   786
                                          37,579                                                  76,040
 More than 1 year and less than 5 years:
 Bank borrowings                          32,859                                                  -
 Lease liabilities                        4,735                                                   2,792
                                          37,594                                                  2,792
 After 5 years:
 Lease liabilities                        3,964                                                   1,310
                                          3,964                                                   1,310

 

 

 

33     Changes in liabilities from financing activities

 

                         Opening balance  Financing cash flows  Interest charge  Other non-cash changes  Closing balance
                         £'000            £'000                 £'000            £'000                   £'000
 31 December 2025
 Lease liabilities       3,817            (906)                 378              4,244                   7,533
 Bank borrowings         29,318           1,636                 2,516            (366)                   33,104
 Loans from UBO          27,413           (2,193)               -                (25,220)                -
 Deferred consideration  -                -                     -                5,600                   5,600
 Total                   60,548           (1,463)               2,894            (15,742)                46,237

 

                    Opening balance  Financing cash flows  Interest charge  Other non-cash changes  Closing balance
                    £'000            £'000                 £'000            £'000                   £'000
 31 December 2024
 Lease liabilities  -                (8)                   23               3,802                   3,817
 Bank borrowings    -                29,246                81               (9)                     29,318
 Loans from UBO     -                -                     -                27,413                  27,413
 Total              -                29,238                104              31,206                  60,548

 

34     Related party transactions

 

During the year, the Group made purchases from companies related by common
control of the majority shareholder. The following transactions were expenses
relating to business operations.

 

                                    Purchases  Purchases  Payable at  Payable at

                                    2025       2024       Dec-25      Dec-24
                                    £'000      £'000      £'000       £'000
 Exalogic SRL                       276        -          51          -
 Koober Investments Ltd             2          -          2           -
 Pay Technologies (CY) Limited      714        -          128         -
 Skywind Malta Ltd                  411        412        42          428
 Smart Town                         295        -          -           -
 Globe Invest Limited               628        -          -           -
 In Touch Games limited             -          -          -           2
 Skywind Services Cyprus Ltd        5          -          1           -
 E.E.C. INVEST IMOBILIARE SRL       889        -          -           -
 Whitestreet Investments LTD        43         -          -           -
 CHAYON TECHNOLOGIES LTD            305        -          247         -
 PAYCOMCY Limited ("PAYCOMCY")      4,281      251        -           51
                                    7,849      663        471         481

 

During the year, the Group made purchases from the major shareholder totalling
£5,786,000 (2024: £nil) relating to Advisory and Service fees incurred in
respect of the IPO. There was no balance outstanding at the reporting date. As
disclosed in note 29, the Group previously had a loan note payable to the
major shareholder which was settled in a debt for equity transaction in the
current year.

 

During the year, the Group made purchases from YaYa Global Tech Limited, a
company controlled by certain key management personnel, totalling £148,100
(2024: £nil).

 

During the prior year, the Group acquired the Crowd Group, as disclosed in
note 26, and acquired a gaming platform for total consideration of
£7,967,000, from the major shareholder.

 

PAYCOMCY provides payment processing services to the Group. As at 31 December
2025, PAYCOMCY held £910,000 (2024: £710,000) of cash collected from
customers due to the Group, included in trade receivables.

 

The Group made sales to Skywind Services Cyprus Ltd in the year totalling
£13,525 (2024: £nil).

 

As part of the bank borrowings disclosed in note 29, Globe Invest Limited and
Millionpaths Limited, entities that are under common control of the major
shareholder, and Keyplay Holdings Limited and Mihai Manoilă, all acted as
guarantors.

 

Disclosures relating to key management personnel remuneration is disclosed in
note 9. Further related party disclosures are provided in note 17 and note 31.

 

 

35     Retirement benefit plans

 

The Group operates a defined contribution retirement benefit plan for all
qualifying employees. The assets of the plans are held separately from those
of the Group in funds under the control of trustees. The total expense
recognised in the statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income
of £153,000 (December 2024: £68,000) represents contributions payable to
these plans by the Group at rates specified in the rules of the plans.

36     Ultimate controlling party

 

Mr Teddy Sagi, who holds a direct 69.5% shareholding in the Company, is the
ultimate controlling party, exercising control through his majority ownership.

37     Post balance sheet events

 

A final dividend of 5.9p per ordinary share has been proposed but not yet
approved.

 

On 18 May 2026, the Group announced it had entered into an asset purchase
agreement to acquire the trade, business and certain assets (excluding any
liabilities, cash and trade receivables) of Rev Corp Limited, trading as Rev
Comps, for expected consideration of £11,790,000. The final consideration
amount is subject to the audited financial statements for the 12 month period
ended 31 May 2026

 

The group will pay the consideration in thee instalments, currently estimated
as; (1) at Completion (45%), (2) subject to final determination of Rev Comp's
audited accounts for the year end 31 May 2026 (34%), and (3) a deferred
portion payable on the 2nd anniversary of Completion (21%).  In addition,
the Sellers may also be entitled to earnout payments based on achieved
adjusted profit before tax growth of the business across the two financial
years ending 31 December 2027 and 31 December 2028, compared to adjusted
profit before tax in Rev Comp's audited accounts for the year ended 31 May
2026.

 

 

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