NameWorld.com

ACCEPTING OFFERS FOR THE ENTIRE PORTFOLIO!
USD $649,000 OBO for all 800+ domain names

Average age of 95% of the portfolio is August 5, 2002 (23+ years)
99.8% of domain names are .com's.

Please reach out to place an offer or for more details.

ScoreTip.com X2

 

Also includes ScoreTips.com, registered also on November 22, 2003.

As of now, 38 U.S. states have legalized casino and /or sports betting in some form.  Online betting is a multi-billion-dollar global industry.

Those are excellent, short, and memorable domains — and the fact that they’re old (registered in 2003) makes them even more valuable.

Here are some directions you could take with ScoreTip.com and ScoreTips.com:


1. Sports Betting & Predictions

  • Betting advice platform: A site for publishing tips on sports betting — football, basketball, cricket, tennis, etc.

  • Community-driven picks: Users can share predictions (“tips”) and track accuracy over time.

  • Premium subscription: Paid membership for insider picks, betting strategies, or AI-driven odds analysis.


2. Sports Fan Engagement

  • Live score commentary: Pairing score updates with “tips” or insights, almost like micro-blogging around games.

  • Fantasy sports: Tips for fantasy football, NBA fantasy, or cricket Dream11.

  • Score prediction contests: Users guess scores to win prizes or bragging rights.


3. Data & Analytics Brand

  • Sports analytics hub: Offer machine-learning driven score predictions.

  • API service: “ScoreTip API” that developers can integrate into apps for predictive insights.

  • Affiliate partnerships: Promote sportsbooks or fantasy platforms with revenue-sharing.


4. Expansion Beyond Sports

  • Gaming & eSports: Tips on scores, rankings, or match outcomes in popular eSports (League of Legends, CS2, Dota 2, etc.).

  • Education/Training angle: Could be adapted into “tips” for scoring high on tests/exams (e.g., “SAT Score Tips”).

  • General advice brand: The names are versatile enough that “Score Tips” could mean “ways to score better in anything” — from sports, academics, to lifestyle.


5. Branding & Value

  • The plural/singular pair is powerful. You can:

    • Use one for the main brand (e.g., ScoreTip.com as primary site).

    • Use the other for marketing, redirects, or future expansion.

  • Their age (2003) means they carry some SEO trust and credibility, especially in sports/gambling niches.

  • Short, memorable, and keyword-friendly for “score” + “tips.”

 

Comparable Sales & Market Signals

These are domain sales relevant to sports / betting / “tips” / “scores” niches, or domain‐prices in that general field:

Domain Sale Price Notes
BettingTips.com US$150,000 Strong match: “betting” + “tips,” highly relevant, generic, .com.
Betting.online US$400,000 Different TLD (.online) but shows appetite for high-value domains in betting vertical.
BestOdds.com US$1,025,000 Very similar in being sports betting / predictions + short, simple, strong keywords.
Casino.com US$5,500,000 Online betting is a multi-billion-dollar global industry.

What Drives The Value

To assess how ScoreTip.com / ScoreTips.com may compare, here are important factors:

  • Keyword strength: “Score” + “tip(s)” are good generic keywords in sports / betting / fantasy verticals. Hitting on common words helps.

  • Length & simplicity: These are shortish and easy to remember. That increases value.

  • Brandability: They’re easy to brand, fairly memorable, and tell you what the site might be about (tips, predictions, scoring).

  • Domain age: Since they’re from 2003, that adds legitimacy / trust, potential SEO benefit, which is a plus.

  • Plural vs singular: You have both versions — that’s good; some buyers prefer singular “ScoreTip.com”, some might want “ScoreTips.com” if they want the idea of many tips. Having both could let you package or negotiate.

  • TLD (.com): That’s the gold standard. Having .com gives you more “baseline” value than many newer / less common TLDs.

DTV.com

June 8, 1997

Premium domain name.

What Drives the Price.

Several key factors that matter (and would for DTV.com):

  1. Memorability / Acronym Value
    “DTV” is already a known acronym (“Digital TV”) so it’s more valuable than random letters.

  2. Brandability
    It’s short, clean, easy to pronounce, type, remember.

  3. History / Age
    Registered since 1997 helps with credibility, possibly some SEO age, maybe backlinks, which can add value.

  4. Market & Demand
    How many companies want “DTV” as a brand/acronym? Probably many in media/tech. Also international interest (non-English speaking companies sometimes value short acronyms highly).

  5. Comparable Letter Quality
    Letters used matters: vowels vs consonants, certain letters are more “premium” in different markets, etc.

  6. Negotiation & Use Case
    If you have a buyer who can make good use of it (e.g. a streaming company, a TV brand, etc.), they may pay more.


Estimated Value Range for DTV.com

Based on the above and comparing to recent similar domain sales:

  • Low end (if buyer interest is modest, or letters seen as “just generic / less premium”): USD $100,000 – $300,000

  • Mid range (good demand, good pitch / use case): USD $300,000 – $800,000

  • High end (strong brand interest, international buyer, strategic use, maybe tied to a big company): USD $800,000 – $2,000,000+

It would be unusual for a 3-letter .com of decent acronym recognition like DTV to sell for very low amounts.