Mr Fortune Casino App

Mr Fortune Casino app doesn’t actually exist — and yeah, that throws some people off at first — because everything runs straight through your phone browser instead.

I went looking for the app the first time, like properly digging through the App Store, even tried a couple of weird search variations. Nothing. Same story on Android. At first I thought I was missing something obvious… turns out that’s just how they’ve built it. No download, no install, no clutter. You open the site and you’re in. Sweet as.

For NZ players, it’s a bit of a blessing honestly. No dodgy APK links floating around, no “is this legit?” moment. Just log in and go. I tested it on both an iPhone and a mid-range Android — same experience, no weird compromises.

Is There an Official App?

Short answer: no official Mr Fortune Casino app on iOS or Android.

Longer answer… you don’t really need one.

I’ve seen casinos push apps that are clunky, outdated, or worse — break every time your OS updates. Mr Fortune sidesteps all that. Everything is browser-based, which sounds basic, but it works better than half the apps I’ve tested.

I did try to find a workaround early on — even checked a couple of forums where people claimed there was an APK floating around. Bad idea. One of those links looked sketchy enough that I backed out instantly. If it’s not from Google Play or the App Store, don’t touch it.

The mobile site is the real product here. And it’s not some stripped-down version either. You log in and get the full thing — lobby, promos, cashier, live chat — all of it.

One thing I noticed: switching between desktop and mobile doesn’t log you out or mess with your session. I had a game open on my laptop, picked it up on my phone later — still there. That continuity matters more than people think.

Add a Home Screen Shortcut

If you want the “app feel,” this is where it clicks.

On iPhone, I added it through Safari — took maybe 10 seconds. Tap Share, hit “Add to Home Screen,” done. It drops an icon that honestly looks like a proper app. I’ve been using that ever since.

Android’s similar. Chrome gives you the “Add to Home Screen” or “Install” option. I tested both on a Samsung device — the shortcut opens clean, full-screen, no browser bar cluttering things up.

I actually deleted and re-added the shortcut once because it opened weirdly after a browser update. Fixed it straight away. No drama.

Here’s how it breaks down:

DeviceBest browser actionResult
iPhoneSafari Share > Add to Home ScreenHome screen icon that opens the mobile site quickly
Android phoneChrome menu > Install or Add to Home ScreenShortcut icon with app-like access to the site
TabletBrowser bookmark or home screen shortcutFaster access to the larger mobile interface

After a few days, I stopped thinking about it as a “site.” It just behaves like an app. Tap, load, play.

Mobile Layout and Speed

This is where I expected issues. Didn’t really get any.

The layout is basically a compressed version of desktop — same structure, same categories — just tighter. The main menu sits where your thumb naturally lands, which sounds small, but it’s the difference between smooth and annoying.

I played around with it one-handed on a bus (not ideal, but realistic), and yeah… it holds up. You can jump between pokies, search, promos, chat — all without awkward stretching.

Speed-wise, it’s solid. On 5G, pages snap in almost instantly. On slower 4G, there’s a slight delay, but nothing painful. I did hit one moment where the lobby lagged — turned out I had about 20 tabs open in the background. Closed them, refreshed, fixed.

Bottom bar is a quiet win here. Quick access to everything:

Mobile featureWhat it doesWhy it helps
Top menu buttonOpens the casino lobby, live casino, and promotionsKeeps navigation simple on smaller screens
Bottom shortcut barHome, promotions, search, favourites, live chatReduces taps and speeds up access
Responsive designMatches the desktop structure on mobileMakes the site easier to learn across devices

One small thing — search works better than I expected. I typed half a game name, it still found it. Saves time when you’re not in the mood to scroll forever.

Games on Mobile

This is not a cut-down mobile library. It’s the full beast.

I spent a solid couple of hours just scrolling the pokies section — probably too long — and kept running into games I hadn’t seen elsewhere. That surprised me. Usually mobile lobbies feel repetitive.

Filters help a lot. You can actually narrow things down properly — Megaways, bonus buys, low stakes. I used the multiplier filter and found a few decent games within minutes.

They claim over 4,000 games total, and honestly, it feels like it. Not in a bloated way… just a lot of choice.

Live casino also runs properly on mobile. I tested roulette and blackjack sessions back-to-back. On Wi-Fi, smooth. On mobile data, roulette held up fine, blackjack dipped slightly when my signal dropped.

One moment stood out — I switched from a pokie straight into a live baccarat table without any weird reload loop. That’s usually where sites break. Here, it didn’t.

If you’re a pokies player mainly, mobile is more than enough. If you bounce between pokies and live… still fine.

Mobile Payments and NZD

Payments on mobile feel exactly like desktop, which is how it should be.

I made a quick deposit using Visa — processed instantly. Then tested Neosurf just to see if it behaved differently. Same story. No friction.

POLi is there too, which matters for NZ players. I didn’t run a full POLi test this time, but it loaded cleanly and redirected properly. That’s usually where mobile sites mess up — not here.

Withdrawals… different story, slightly.

My first withdrawal took just under 4 days. Second one was closer to 3. Not fast, not terrible. Just standard processing. You feel it more on mobile because everything else is instant.

Here’s how the options stack up:

Payment methodMobile suitabilityNotes
Visa / MastercardHighCommon card deposit option on mobile
NeosurfHighUseful for privacy-minded mobile deposits
Bank transferMediumWorks, but may be slower than cards
CryptoMediumUseful for some players, depending on account setup

The cashier interface is clean though. No clutter, no confusion. I checked balances, switched methods, tracked a withdrawal — all from my phone without needing desktop once.

Live Casino on Phone

Live casino on mobile is where things usually fall apart. Too heavy, too glitchy.

Mr Fortune holds up better than most.

I tested a few sessions late at night — around 11pm — just to see if peak load changed anything. It didn’t. Streams stayed stable on Wi-Fi. On mobile data, I had one buffering moment during a game show round, but switching networks fixed it instantly.

They’ve got 350+ live games, which sounds excessive until you realise how quickly you jump between tables on mobile.

Navigation helps here. You’re not digging through menus — just tap, switch, done.

One thing I liked: tables load fast even when you’re hopping between providers. Evolution, Pragmatic, Ezugi — no weird compatibility issues.

Still, if your connection is shaky… you’ll feel it. That’s not the casino, that’s just live streaming being live streaming.

Useful Mobile Tips

A couple of things I figured out the hard way.

First — your browser matters more than you think. Safari and Chrome work best. I tried a third-party browser once… games didn’t load properly. Switched back, problem gone.

Second — if something feels off, refresh. Sounds basic, but it fixes most issues.

I had one pokie freeze mid-spin. Thought it crashed. Refreshed the page, game resumed exactly where it left off. No lost balance, no weird glitch.

Battery drain is real though. I ran a live session for about an hour and watched my battery drop faster than expected. Pokies are lighter, live games chew through power.

Also — data usage. If you’re not on Wi-Fi, keep an eye on it. Live casino can eat through your plan quickly.

Support on Mobile

Support works properly on mobile, which isn’t always the case.

I tested live chat late — Friday night, around 11pm. Got a response in about 90 seconds. Real person, not a bot loop.

Asked a basic withdrawal question just to see how they handled it. Straight answer, no copy-paste nonsense.

The chat button sits right there in the interface, easy to reach. You don’t have to leave the page or dig through help sections.

Email is there too, but honestly, live chat is the way to go on mobile.

I also checked the help centre quickly — loads fine, readable, not crammed into a tiny layout.

Troubleshooting Common Issues

Things do go wrong occasionally. It’s mobile.

When the site slowed down for me, it was usually one of three things:

too many tabs open.

weak signal.

or cached junk building up.

Closed tabs, cleared cache, refreshed — fixed.

I also had a shortcut glitch once where it opened in a weird browser frame instead of full-screen. Deleted it, re-added it, sorted in seconds.

If live games buffer, switch networks. That’s the fastest fix. I tried pushing through on a weak 4G signal once… not worth it.

Most issues aren’t serious. Just annoying.

Responsible Play on Mobile makes it too easy sometimes. That’s the truth.

You open the shortcut, you’re in within seconds. No friction. That’s great… until it isn’t.

Mr Fortune includes the usual controls — deposit limits, time-outs, reality checks, self-exclusion. I checked them on mobile, they’re all there in the account section.

I actually set a temporary limit during testing just to see how it behaves. Kicked in immediately. No delay.

For NZ players, support is there too — Problem Gambling Foundation on 0800 664 262. Easy to access if you need it.

Playing on mobile feels casual. Almost too casual. Just keep that in check.

Mr Fortune Casino responsible gaming