Create a PlanGames account in a few quick steps
Creating A New PlanGames Account
A PlanGames account lets you keep your play history in one place, manage deposits and withdrawals, and complete identity checks when youβre ready to cash out. It also ties your details to the casinoβs responsible gambling tools, so you can set limits and keep the same settings across sessions.
Right after registration, you can sign in, browse the lobby, and start playing real-money games once you make a deposit. PlanGames runs in a mobile browser, so you can register and log in from a phone or tablet without switching to a desktop.
Create A New PlanGames Account
- Open the PlanGames website in your browser.
- Click Register on the homepage.
- Fill out the registration form with your email address, a password, and any required profile details, then submit the form.
- Check your inbox for the PlanGames verification email and click the confirmation link to activate your account.
- Return to PlanGames, click Log in, and sign in with the email and password you used during registration.
KYC Verification At PlanGames
PlanGames runs KYC checks to confirm who you are, where you live, and that the payment method used on the account belongs to you. The review starts after you submit documents in the verification area of your account.
PlanGames requests verification when you make your first withdrawal, when your total withdrawals reach a set threshold, or when activity triggers a security check (for example, a change of name details, a new device, or a new deposit method). Verification is also required if the account shows restricted access due to age or country rules.
Most checks finish within 24β48 hours after you upload clear files. If the team requests a re-upload, or if manual review is needed for a payment method, the process can take up to 5 business days.
- Identity (ID/Passport): A valid passport or national ID card. PlanGames typically needs a full-color photo of the document (front and back for an ID card), with all corners visible and your details readable. If the system asks for it, upload a selfie or short video to match your face to the document.
- Address proof: A document dated within the last 90 days showing your full name and residential address. Accepted examples include a utility bill (electricity, water, gas), a bank statement, or an official government letter. Screenshots of app pages are rejected if they donβt show the issuer, date, and address on the same page.
- Payment method: For bank cards, upload images of the card showing your name and the last 4 digits; hide the middle digits and the CVV code. For e-wallets, upload a statement or account page that shows your name and the wallet ID or email used for deposits. PlanGames may request proof of ownership for each deposit method added to the account before approving a withdrawal to that method.
As of now, PlanGames uses a document-first KYC flow with a typical 1β2 day review window, and delays mainly come from unreadable uploads or missing ownership proof for the payment method.
New Account Security Measures At PlanGames
- Strong password: PlanGames requires a minimum of 12 characters and accepts up to 64. Use a unique passphrase with a mix of uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols, and avoid names, birthdays, or reused passwords from email and social accounts. A password manager is the safest way to generate and store it.
- 2FA: PlanGames lets you enable two-factor authentication using an authenticator app (TOTP, 6-digit codes that refresh every 30 seconds). Backup recovery codes are issued once during setup; store them offline because they are the only self-service way back in if you lose your phone.
- Login notifications: PlanGames sends an email alert after sign-in from a new device, browser, or country, including the time and IP-based location. The message includes a βNot you?β action to reset the password and revoke active sessions.
- Data protection: PlanGames encrypts traffic with TLS and stores passwords as salted hashes, not in plain text. Identity and payment details are restricted to compliance and payments workflows, with access logging and role-based permissions, and account changes (email, phone, withdrawal details) require confirmation to reduce takeover risk.