3111dbt didn't come out of a boardroom. It came out of frustration. The founders — a small group of tech and gaming enthusiasts based in Dhaka — were tired of watching Bangladeshi players get a raw deal on international platforms. Slow withdrawals, confusing interfaces, customer support that never replied in Bangla time zones, and odds that felt rigged against local bettors. Something had to change.
So they built 3111dbt from scratch, with Bangladesh at the centre of every decision. The payment system was designed around bKash, Nagad, and Rocket — not credit cards that most players don't use. The support team was hired locally, trained to respond quickly, and empowered to actually solve problems rather than just read from a script. The games were selected based on what Bangladeshi players actually enjoy, not what was easiest to license.
In the early days, 3111dbt was a small operation. A handful of games, a basic sportsbook, and a team of about twenty people working out of a single office. But word spread fast. Players who had been burned by other platforms gave 3111dbt a try and found something different — a platform that paid out when it said it would, that answered messages, and that kept improving based on player feedback.
The turning point came when 3111dbt introduced instant withdrawals via bKash. At the time, most platforms took 24–72 hours to process a withdrawal. 3111dbt did it in under five minutes. That single feature brought in thousands of new players within weeks — and it set the standard that 3111dbt has maintained ever since.
Today, 3111dbt serves hundreds of thousands of players across Bangladesh. The game library has grown to include original titles like Bird Catcher, Treasure Hunt, The Great Icescape, and Color Prediction — all developed with local players in mind. The sportsbook covers cricket, football, Water Polo, and dozens of other sports with live in-play betting and competitive odds.
But the core of what 3111dbt is hasn't changed. It's still a platform built by people who care about the player experience, not just the bottom line. Every update, every new feature, every policy decision goes through the same filter: is this good for our players? If the answer is yes, it gets built. If not, it doesn't.