No tournaments currently indexed for Malaysia residents matching these filters.
We're actively expanding Malaysia coverage — check back, or browse all tournaments.
Frequently asked questions about Malaysia
Which crypto exchanges are SC-licensed in Malaysia?
As of December 2025, six exchanges are registered as Recognised Market Operators for Digital Asset Exchanges (RMO-DAX): HATA Digital, Luno Malaysia, MX Global, SINEGY DAX, Kinetic DAX (formerly Tokenize), and Torum. The SC plans to update the framework with new RMO Guidelines in Q2 2026.
Are offshore crypto exchanges available to Malaysian residents?
Officially restricted. Crypto exchanges serving Malaysian residents must register as RMO-DAX with the Securities Commission. Bybit, OKX, Binance.com lack RMO-DAX registration and Malaysian-resident tournament eligibility on those platforms is typically restricted. Always check the specific event's terms before depositing.
How are tournament winnings taxed in Malaysia?
Tournament prize income is generally reportable as personal income under Malaysian income-tax law. Crypto-asset gains are treated based on whether the activity is hobby vs business — personal investment gains are typically not taxed, but trading-as-business activity is. Consult a Malaysian tax advisor for amounts above modest thresholds.
What's Bursa DVTC?
The Derivatives Virtual Trading Contest run by Bursa Malaysia — a recurring exchange-direct competition with RM100,000+ prize pools focused on Bursa derivatives instruments. Together with BISC (Bursa Inter-Varsity Stock Challenge) it's the cornerstone of Malaysian retail competitive-trading infrastructure.
Can Malaysian residents enter international championships?
Yes — WCTC and the U.S. Investing Championship accept international entrants from Malaysia. The audited-statement structure is the same; foreign-currency prize income is reportable under Malaysian tax rules.
