Point a browser at the address once catalogued as Butler Webs: Holidays and the screen that loads is headed "Fortune League," with a search box and a run of articles about odds comparison, weekday sportsbook bonuses, and something called slot cycle theory. Nothing on that page has to do with holidays, observances, calendars, or feast days. The listing category and the live content have parted ways completely, and there is no gentle way to describe the gap.

So this write-up has to be honest about a plain fact: the resource being reviewed is not there anymore. What sits at the URL is a South African gambling and sports-betting site wearing an unrelated name.

What loads instead of a holidays resource

The article list reads like a betting-industry content mill. Odds comparison. Responsible-betting communities. RTP fluctuation inside bonus rounds. Casino document verification. Payout balance tracking, betting heat maps, sportsbook account suspension policy. Each entry ends in a "Read More" link, and the whole thing is bolted under that "Fortune League" banner.

There is no observances content of any kind. No list of public holidays, no explanation of where a date comes from, no printable calendar, no regional variations, none of the material the original entry for Butler Webs: Holidays would have promised. A visitor arriving for the holidays angle gets bettor-facing copy aimed at a South African audience and nothing else.

The Fortune League gambling articles

Taken on their own terms, the articles are the sort of keyword-driven filler that expired domains tend to attract once someone repurposes them. Odds comparison and RTP explainers are common in that corner of the web, produced in volume to catch search traffic. Whether any of it is accurate is hard to say from the page, and it barely matters here, since none of it belongs under a heading that says Butler Webs: Holidays.

The presence of a "responsible betting communities" piece and a document-verification article suggests the operator is at least gesturing at the compliance language betting sites use. That is about the only structural signal on the page. It is a betting portal, plainly.

The missing observances content

Whatever Butler Webs: Holidays used to host, it is gone. An expired or resold domain that now points at gambling copy is a well-worn pattern, and this fits it neatly: same content returned by two separate retrieval attempts, no trace of the former subject, a new brand name up top.

For anyone who bookmarked the page years ago as a reference on holidays and observances, the practical answer is that the reference no longer exists at this location. That is the single most useful thing to know before clicking.

Contact and any way to reach whoever runs it

Here the site gives almost nothing. No phone number appears. No postal address, no contact page, no contact form, no business hours. The navigation amounts to a "Skip to content" link, the Fortune League label, and a search field.

For a gambling operation that is a real problem, not a minor quibble. Betting sites carry money and personal documents, and the absence of any visible route to a human, any licensing statement, or any physical location is the kind of omission that should make a cautious person close the tab. A form would at least cover the missing email, but that omission is not held against it here, because there is no form either. There is simply no way to reach anyone shown on what was retrieved.

Judged as the holidays resource it was listed as, contact is moot, because the resource is absent. Judged as the betting site it has become, the contact vacuum is a red flag on its own.

Reputation and the verdict on Butler Webs: Holidays

A search for outside opinion turned up nothing that actually points at this site. The names that surface belong to other operations entirely: Holiday-Butler, The Holiday Butler, Butler Direct, a thing spelled Butlerr. None of them reference the domain in question, and none say anything about the Fortune League content now living there. So there is no third-party track record to lean on, positive or negative. The betting brand has left no reviewable footprint that could be found, and the holidays site it replaced has no current reputation because it has no current existence.

That leaves a straightforward assessment. As a holidays and observances reference, Butler Webs: Holidays fails outright, because that content is gone and a gambling portal occupies the address. As a betting site, it is anonymous, contactless, and unvouched-for, which is close to the worst combination a gambling page can offer a stranger.

If the goal is holiday information, this is a dead end, and I would send people elsewhere without hesitation. If someone somehow lands here wanting to bet, the lack of any licensing detail, ownership, or contact route is reason enough to walk away and use a site that identifies itself and can be reached.

There is a small chance the operator restores or redirects the domain, and the picture would change entirely if the holidays material returned. On the evidence available, though, the entry for Butler Webs: Holidays describes something that no longer matches what is served, and nothing about the thing being served inspires confidence. Treat the current Butler Webs: Holidays listing as stale, and treat the Fortune League page it resolves to with the skepticism any faceless betting site deserves.

Nothing here recommends a visit, and the honest recommendation is to skip it. Should the observances content ever come back, Butler Webs: Holidays could be reconsidered, but that day is not today.