| Trifecta Gold Provides Exploration Updates for the Rye and Mount Hinton Projects, Yukon accessnewswire.comMultiple  rock  samples at Rye assayed greater than 2 g/t gold, up to 8.98 g/t  gold,  near diamond drill holes with high sheeted vein density
 
Continuous chip samples from Mount Hinton trenching yielded 9.85 g/t gold over 1.30 m; rock specimen samples up to 20.6 g/t gold
 
Geochemical analysis and review for Rye drill core is anticipated to be eight weeks
 
 
 VANCOUVER, BC /  ACCESS Newswire / September 30, 2025 / Trifecta Gold Ltd.   (TSXV:TG)(OTCQB:TRRFF) ("Trifecta" or the "Company") is pleased to   provide an update on its 2025 exploration programs at the Rye and Mount   Hinton Projects. Both projects are located in the Yukon portion of the   Tombstone Gold Belt, a mining district that hosts several significant   Reduced Intrusion-Related Gold System ("RIRGS") mines and deposits, such   as Fort Knox in Alaska, Eagle in Yukon and Snowline Gold's Valley   Deposit, also in Yukon.
 
 Summary of 2025 work:
 
 
 Rye Project1992   m of diamond drilling at Rye in six holes. Multiple holes intersected   broad zones of sheeted quartz veining as reported by the Company on  August 28th and  September 18th, 2025,
 
66   rock samples collected at Rye, in conjunction with geological mapping,   with assays having been received in full for 38 of the samples,  reported  by the Company on  September 18, 2025, and assays for gold analysis only received for a further 28 samples, which are described below,
 
753   m of diamond drilling at Mount Hinton in two holes, where core was   selectively sampled and assay results have been received in their   entirety,
 
103 rock samples collected at Mount Hinton, in   conjunction with geological mapping, where assay results have been   received in full.
 
 The   Rye Project is located in eastern Yukon, 14 km south of the North  Canol  Road, an unpaved, government-maintained highway. Work in 2024  outlined  an intense, 500 x 200 m gold-, bismuth-, and tellurium-in-soil  anomaly  overlying the contact zone of the Itsi Pluton and surrounding  hornfels.  Sheeted quartz veining is observed both within the intrusion  and  surrounding hornfels and vein specimen samples have yielded up to  21.1  g/t gold and 8550 ppm bismuth.
 
 Prospecting and rock  sampling at  Rye, which was performed alongside the 2025 drill program,  continued to  identify sheeted, gold bearing veins within the Itsi  intrusion and the  surrounding hornfelsed siliciclastics. Gold analysis  for the final batch  of 28 rock samples has been completed, while the  Company awaits  geochemical analysis for the remaining metals of  interest. Several  outcrop samples within this batch collected within  the meta-sedimentary  rock, in the vicinity of holes RY-25-01 and  RY-25-06, yielded assays  greater than 2 g/t gold, including a highlight  value of 8.98 g/t gold.  Rock samples of semi-massive arsenopyrite  veins developed within the  Itsi granodiorite yielded up to 3.72 g/t  gold (Figure 1).
 
 Rye  drill core is currently being cut and  samples are being shipped  incrementally to an analytical preparation  lab in Whitehorse, Yukon,  where the samples will be prepared for  detailed chemical analysis. The  Company has been informed that the  turnaround time for the analysis is  anticipated to be six to seven  weeks.
 
 
  Figure 1   - Map of completed 2025 diamond drill holes at Rye, along with drill   hole vein density illustrated thematically, and rock sample results for   gold 
 
 
 Mount Hinton Project
 Two   diamond drill holes were completed at Mount Hinton, which is situated   within the Keno Hill Mining District of the Tombstone Gold Belt, less   than 4 km from Hecla Mining Company's Keno Hill mill. The drilling   totaled 753 metres and was designed to test for evidence of an intrusion   in the floor of Granite Creek (the GC Target). Both holes targeted a   modelled resistivity high, with hole MH-25-039 targeting an area of   moderate magnetic response and hole MH-25-040 targeting a high magnetic   response. The holes cut Keno Hill Formation stratigraphy, containing   anomalous zones of disseminated pyrrhotite and rare sub-one-metre galena   and sphalerite veins before intersecting a wide fault zone that   underlies a thick package of green-grey schist. MH-25-039 terminated in   this fault zone while MH-25-040 drilled through the fault into the  Basal  Quartzite and intersected narrow intrusive dykes. The holes did  not  return significant results for gold or silver.
 
 In 2025, the   Company also performed limited prospecting and rock geochemical  sampling  in the lead-up and throughout the drill program. Specific  attention was  paid to vein exposures in the floor of Granite Creek and  within an  operating placer mine, which may represent strike extensions  of  delineated, gold-bearing veins in cliffy exposures to the east and  west.
 
 Excavator  trenching at the 78 vein returned 9.85 g/t gold  over 1.30 m along  strike of a previous surface exposure that returned  24 g/t gold over  1.25 m. A specimen sample of semi-massive  arsenopyrite, removed from a  pit 860 m to the northeast, yielded a  value of 20.6 g/t gold (Figure 2).  Diamond drill hole and excavator  trench specifications are tabulated  below.
 
 
 | Drill Hole / Trench ID 
 
 | Easting (m) 
 
 | Northing (m) 
 
 | Elevation (m) 
 
 | Azimuth (°) 
 
 | Dip (°) 
 
 | Total Depth (m) 
 
 | Results 
 
 |  | MH-25-039 
 
 | 499836 
 
 | 7080285 
 
 | 1152 
 
 | 20 
 
 | -55 
 
 | 355 
 
 | No significant results 
 
 |  | MH-25-040 
 
 | 500101 
 
 | 7080380 
 
 | 1197 
 
 | 200 
 
 | -80 
 
 | 398 
 
 | No significant results 
 
 |  | 25MHTR-1 
 
 | 495658 
 
 | 7082459 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | Rock sample from nearby pit yielded 20.6 g/t gold 
 
 |  | 25MHTR-2 
 
 | 494895 
 
 | 7082034 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | N/A 
 
 | Chip sample of 9.85 g/t gold over 1.30 m 
 
 | 
  Figure 2 - Gold-in-rock geochemistry of the Granite Creek basin, along with the location of the two 2025 diamond drill holes 
 
 
 Geological   mapping at Mt. Hinton continues to be performed as part of a  multi-year  research program in the Keno Hill District, undertaken by  the Yukon  Geological Survey ("YGS"), Simon Fraser University, the  University of  Alberta and partner companies.
 
 Quality Assurance / Quality Control (QAQC)
 Rock   samples from both projects were analyzed by ALS Minerals, with sample   preparation in Whitehorse, Yukon and assays and geochemical analyses   completed in North Vancouver, British Columbia. Rock samples from Rye   were analyzed for gold by fire assay with an atomic absorption   spectroscopy finish on 30 g samples (Au-AA23), and 48 other elements by   four acid digestion and inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy   (ME-MS61L). Overlimit analysis for samples with gold values greater than   10 g/t were analyzed by fire assay using a gravimetric finish   (Au-GRA21). Rock samples from Mount Hinton were analyzed for gold by 50 g   fire assay with atomic absorption spectroscopy (Au-AA26) and 51 other   elements by aqua regia digestion and inductively coupled plasma-atomic   emission spectroscopy (ME-MS41).
 
 All analyses of core samples  from  the 2025 Mount Hinton program were performed by ALS Minerals with   sample preparation in Whitehorse and assays and geochemical analyses in   North Vancouver. Samples were routinely analyzed for gold by a 50 g  fire  assay followed by atomic absorption (Au-AA26) and 51 elements by   inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ME-MS41). Samples that   exceeded the detection limits of the routine methods were assayed for   silver, copper, lead and zinc by inductively coupled plasma-atomic   emission spectroscopy (Ag-/Cu-/Zn-OG46).
 
 Rigorous procedures were   in place regarding sample collection, chain of custody and data entry.   Certified assay standards, coarse reject duplicates, field duplicates   and blanks were routinely inserted into the sample stream to ensure   integrity of the assay process. All of the results reported have passed   the QA/QC screening.
 
 Technical information in this news release   has been approved by Trifecta's Vice President, Jackson Morton, P.Geo.,  a  qualified person as defined under the terms of National Instrument   43-101.
 
 Tombstone Gold Belt
 Extending  more  than 1000 km from the Fairbanks district in Alaska eastward  across the  entire width of Yukon, the Tombstone Gold Belt hosts many  large Reduced  Intrusion-Related Gold System (RIRGS) mines such as Fort  Knox in Alaska  (>10 million oz), Eagle and Olive in Yukon (>4  million oz) and the  past-producing Brewery Creek Mine, also in Yukon.  Since May 2020 over  17 million additional ounces of gold have been  discovered in the Yukon  portion of the belt, including Snowline Gold's  Tier 1 Valley discovery,  Sitka Gold's RC deposit, Banyan Gold's AurMac  deposits and Victoria  Gold's Raven deposit.
 
 Tombstone Gold Belt  systems are  characterized by sheeted, auriferous quartz veins forming  in the  carapace zones of Cretaceous-age plutons. They have a  characteristic  geochemical signature with a  gold-bismuth-tellurium±tungsten core within  a broader gold-arsenic  halo. The deposits are found within and  surrounding the reduced  intrusions, and typically exhibit a geophysical  signature comprising a  magnetic low (ie. reduced) coinciding with at  conductivity low. Veining  in RIRGS systems is typically zoned with a  core of sheeted veins  surrounded by more discrete gold-arsenic veins and  more distal  silver-lead-zinc veins.
 
 About Trifecta Gold Ltd.
 Trifecta   is a Canadian-based precious metals exploration company dedicated to   increasing shareholder value through the discovery and development of   100% held gold projects in Yukon and Nevada. Trifecta has secured an   option to acquire a 100% interest in Mt. Hinton, Rye and 9 other highly   prospective, intrusion-related gold projects located in Yukon's   Tombstone Gold Belt where over 17 million ounces of gold have been   discovered since May 2020. Initial drilling at the Company's Yuge Gold   Project, located in northern Nevada, has identified multiple broad zones   of gold mineralization near historical high-grade mines. The Company's   Eureka Project hosts an 8 x 2.5 kilometre belt of surface showings and   anomalous gold-in-soil that straddle the headwaters of two of the most   productive placer creeks in Yukon's southern Klondike Goldfields.   Trifecta's Treble Project covers a large hydrothermal system, located   midway between Western Copper and Gold Corporation's Casino Deposit, the   largest copper and gold deposit in the Yukon, and Rockhaven Resources   Ltd.'s Klaza Deposit, a high-grade gold-silver deposit.
 
 ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
 "Richard Drechsler"
 President and CEO
 
 For further information concerning Trifecta or its various exploration projects please visit  www.trifectagold.com or contact:
 
 Corporate Information
 Trifecta Gold Ltd.
 Richard Drechsler
 President and CEO
 Tel: (604) 687-2522
 
 This   news release may contain forward looking statements based on   assumptions and judgments of management regarding future events or   results that may prove to be inaccurate as a result of exploration and   other risk factors beyond its control, and actual results may differ   materially from the expected results.
 
 Neither  the TSX  Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that  term is  defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts   responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this news release.
 
 SOURCE: Trifecta Gold Ltd.
 
 
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