Nevada King Gold Corp. announced assay results from three vertical reverse circulation holes recently completed at its Atlanta Gold Mine Project located 264km northeast of Las Vegas, Nevada, in the prolific Battle Mountain Trend. The three holes reported tested gaps within the existing drill pattern across the 80m-wide northerly trending Atlanta Mine Fault Zone between the East Atlanta Fault and the West Atlanta Fault and are plotted in plan and along an updated Section 22-10N(3), initially released on April 20, 2023 and updated on August 10, 2023.

2.37 g/t Au over 74.7m in AT23NS-124 starts at a depth of just 12m beneath the pit floor and was sited to test for a northward extension of higher-grade and thicker mineralization hosted within a 20m-wide fault block, termed the "East High-Grade Zone" that runs along the western side of the EAF and floors the bottom of the Atlanta Pit. The East High-Grade Zone had previously been intercepted in holes drilled south of Section 22-10N(3) and today's intercept successfully extends this zone 30m northward, injecting higher-grade and thicker mineralization into this area of the AMFZ. Since historical explorers did not conduct drilling from within the Atlanta pit, the East High-Grade Zone was not discovered until Nevada King's 2021 drilling campaign that intercepted high-grade oxide mineralization starting at surface from the bottom of the pit, including 5.34 g/t Au over 54.9m and 3.35 g/t Au over 64.1m (released January 12, 2022, and January 20, 2022, respectively).

As shown in Figure 2, the East High-Grade Zone is atypical in that it hosts grades and thicknesses that are considerably greater when compared to most other mineralized fault blocks comprising the AMFZ. AT23NS-120 intercepted 1.14 g/t Au over 38.1m and was positioned 17m north-northwest of AT23NS-124 to define the western boundary of the East High- Grade Zone. The deeper intercept depth relative to AT23NS-124 indicates that AT23NS-120 collared west of the fault bounding the western side of the zone and subsequently drilled down through the boundary fault and into mineralization.

AT23NS-129 stepped a further 39m west of AT23NS-120 into another drill pattern gap and intercepted 1.14 g/t Au over 33.5m, confirming the presence of mineralization within a westward thickening wedge of silica breccia bounded on top and bottom by shallow-dipping contacts. All RC samples from the Atlanta Project are split at the drill site and placed in cloth and plastic bags utilizing a nominal 2kg sample weight. CRF standards, blanks, and duplicates are inserted into the sample stream on-site on a one-in-twenty sample basis, meaning all three inserts are included in each 20-sample group.

Samples are shipped by a local contractor in large sample shipping crates directly to American Assay Lab in Reno, Nevada, with full custody being maintained at all times. At American Assay Lab, samples were weighted then crushed to 75% passing 2mm and pulverized to 85% passing 75 microns in order to produce a 300g pulverized split. Prepared samples are initially run using a four acid + boric acid digestion process and conventional mutli-element ICP-OES analysis.

Gold assays are initially run using 30-gram samples by lead fire assay with an OES finish to a 0.003 ppm detection limit, with samples greater than 10 ppm finished gravimetrically. Every sample is also run through a cyanide leach for gold with an ICP-OES finish. The QA/QC procedure involves regular submission of Certified Analytical Standards and property-specific duplicates.