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With video games comes a new era in gambling
Reading Time: 3 minutes
Gambling is one of the most entertaining and at the same time, lucrative endeavors out there. People go to casinos or visit online gambling websites to have fun and shake off all the exhaustion they have collected during the day, but also to place wagers and win some money.
And even though the industry has never really lacked the big customer base, which was “pampered” with various bonuses and gifts like Australian casino reload bonuses, there are some concerns when it comes to the demographics. You see, slot machines and craps tables might be a great entertainment for Baby Boomers or Generation X, but Millenials are significantly different in their preferences.
In today’s casinos, you won’t be able to find just as many youngsters as older players whose childhood was associated with the development of those brick-and-mortar casinos. One can even say that they’ve been growing side by side.
As for the Millenials, they’re more of an action-loving generation. To them, entertainment is associated with skill, strategy, and a lot of action.
In light of this issue, many casinos are starting to rearrange themselves to account for younger generations. This includes offering more video games as a form of gambling.
Lacking new life
As we’ve mentioned above, the casino industry is steeped with older generations like Baby Boomers and Generation X. When it comes to Millenials, though, they seem to fail to attract them.
Even though major gambling venues like Las Vegas have been upgraded to the point where they not only offer gambling opportunities but also cover other areas of entertainment such as nightclubs, restaurants, sporting events and many more; and even though these possibilities are undoubtedly more appealing to youth, the industry still lacks the new blood.
When offering more diversified entertainment forms, Las Vegas and similar gambling sites actually inhibit their gambling-related revenues and divert them more towards those night clubs and restaurants. Youngsters might go to Vegas, but most of the time, they’ll opt for sporting events and nightclubs, not casino halls.
In 2014, among the visitors of Las Vegas, 24% were Millennials but only 63% of them were actually gambling. This compared to 78% of Baby Boomers and 68% of Generation X.
According to M. Meyerhofer, the Gamblit Gaming executive, “The majority of visitors to Vegas are under the age of 50, while the majority of those who play slot machines are over 50. Casino operators are seeing 100 percent of their floor wired for a population group that is no longer the majority.”
Obsolete technology
One of the main reasons why gambling sites are lacking youngsters is that the majority of games haven’t been updated to meet the requirements of today. For example, slot machines are still based on the exact same mechanism of pulling the lever to ring the reels and win, in case of getting the exact symbols in a row.
While there were some design changes in the game, the main idea has always stayed the same. “Millennials have grown up in an era of digital media and games. The passive experience of a slot machine does not resonate with them,” adds Meyerhofer.
Introduction of video games
As it turns out, things are starting to change in favor of casinos, as well as younger generations. In February 2016, Nevada and New Jersey passed legislation which allows casinos to introduce more skill-based games.
We can even say that things are moving fast, considering the rate at which the new legislation was passed: it was introduced in January 2015 and already in June the same year, it was signed. Everyone’s mentioning that there’s some kind of urgency to introduce new possibilities for new blood.
The idea behind the legislation is that game providers can now create video games that are:
- Skill-based;
- More action-packed;
- Include gambling capabilities.
With such arcade games as Angry Birds, Temple Run, or hard-core shooters like Call of Duty and Battlefield, casinos will be able to attract millions of youngsters in their venues.
Besides, there will be more opportunities for not only playing the games but also to bet on others playing those games. Various casinos in Las Vegas are already including betting on esports in their establishments.
And with such online gaming tournaments as Fortnite World Cup or Counter-Strike: Global Offensive yielding millions of viewers around the world, attaching gambling capabilities to them will undoubtedly bring larger revenues to the industry.
Possible complications
Besides the positive effects, many analysts are warning about the possible negative consequences of such development. According to Tomer Perry, a research associate at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University, introducing younger generations to gambling might create problems.
Perry believes that if conventional gambling is itself very addictive and causes psychological problems to gamers, then adding new video games that appeal to youngsters can propagate this problem to them as well.
At the end of the day, gambling is a form of entertainment that can be just as good as it can be destructive to a certain person. It depends on what you’re planning to do with that risk-taking endeavor.
Bringing new life to the industry can be as beneficial to casinos as to youngsters, who can find their favorite forms of entertainment in brick-and-mortar casinos, as well as their online websites and enjoy a little risk.
Source: Latest News on European Gaming Media Network
This is a Syndicated News piece. Photo credits or photo sources can be found on the source article: With video games comes a new era in gambling
Latest News
GR8 Tech’s Bet It Drives Season 2 Finale: Kelly Kehn on Opening iGaming to New Founders
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Lisbon’s streets set the pace for Season 2 of GR8 Tech’s Bet It Drives—the drive-time podcast where iGaming’s most interesting voices speak freely. Hosted by Yevhen Krazhan, Chief Sales Officer at GR8 Tech, each episode captures raw insight, candid stories, and the energy you can only find on the road.
Episode 4 of the Season 2 finale puts the spotlight on Kelly Kehn, founder, board member, and startup advisor in gaming. As co-founder of Defy the Odds (DTO), she’s building a launchpad and community connecting startups, investors, and operators—with a focus on female and minority founders. Previously, she co-founded the All-In Diversity Project, held ecosystem roles at happyhour.io and SBC, and serves on boards including FUNNZ.
During the ride, Kelly opens up about:
- Why iGaming events matter: the community, access, and acceleration you only get in the room.
- Defy the Odds (DTO): why she and her co-founders built it, what it is, and how founders plug in.
- Women in iGaming: real challenges and how to lower the barrier to entry; inclusion as a growth strategy.
- Pitch ideas that paid off and common startup pitch mistakes.
- The next possible unicorn in iGaming and what makes it possible.
- Soundtrack to success: the song for a win, the pre-coaching track, and the one that sums up her career.
- The boldest ideas: intention, asking for help, and doing the homework.
- The unwritten rule of iGaming.
- Halloween rubric: the scariest moments in life and career, and why saying the hard thing out loud matters.
- Kelly’s Champion Rule: Be kind to yourself and to others.
“As Kelly said, ‘When we open the space to more people and more perspectives, we all win and the pie gets bigger.’ This episode was the perfect finish of our Season 2 in Lisbon,” said Krazhan.
Watch or listen to Season 2, Episode 4 with Kelly Kehn on:
Season 2 of Bet It Drives launched with Rasmus Sojmark, kept pace with Tiago Pereira and Kyrylo Korobka, and now crosses the line with Kelly Kehn in the finale. But still, don’t unbuckle yet: Season 3 is coming soon with more interesting conversations and more reasons to hit play. Follow GR8 Tech to stay in the loop.
The next chapter of iGaming belongs to champions who play smart and bold. Join GR8 Tech at SiGMA Central Europe 2025, Rome, November 3–6, booth 5028-2, and discover the Heavyweight Rulebook—built for operators ready to scale, localize, and win.
The post GR8 Tech’s Bet It Drives Season 2 Finale: Kelly Kehn on Opening iGaming to New Founders appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
Latest News
GambleAware Warns Outdated Gambling Advertising and Marketing Regulations are Leaving Children at Risk of Gambling Harm
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Regulations for online gambling marketing must urgently be brought into the digital age, a new report from the charity GambleAware has warned.
The report reveals that despite gambling being an age-restricted product, children are being exposed to gambling marketing online, before they reach an age at which they can critically evaluate it. This is leading to gambling being normalised and portrayed as “risk-free”, which increases the risk of them experiencing gambling harm.
Gambling harms are becoming an increasing part of children’s lives, with previous research finding that in 2024, around 85,000 children in Britain were experiencing harm from their own gambling, a figure which has doubled since 20233. GambleAware’s new report highlights how seeing gambling marketing and content, online and via social and streaming platforms, could be encouraging children to gamble and contributing to the number experiencing harm.
The new report calls out poor regulation of gambling marketing online, highlighting how more needs to be done to ensure the rules reflect the unique challenges presented by the digital age and urges a reduction in self-regulation to protect children from being exposed to age-restricted gambling content. Alongside this, GambleAware is also calling for mandatory health warnings to be put on all gambling marketing so people are aware of the risks and support available.
Specific changes to help protect children could include moves to hold online platforms to greater account and ensuring existing government programmes, such as the Online Safety Act and Online Advertising Programme, more directly address gambling marketing and content online. Alongside this, other recommendations include the alignment and strengthening of online safety regulatory powers and programmes.
GambleAware research also found strong public support from children and adults for changes to gambling marketing and advertising regulation. Around four in five children (79%) say they want more rules around gambling content and advertising on social media. Alongside this, over seven in ten adults also agree, saying they want more regulation around gambling advertising on social media (74%) and gambling related content on social media (70%).
Anna Hargrave, GambleAware Transition CEO, said: “Gambling operators invest significant resources into online marketing because it works at getting people to gamble more. This has resulted in children and young people being exposed to gambling content online before an age at which they can critically evaluate it and understand the risks that come with it.
“The current regulations covering gambling marketing and advertising online were designed before most children had easy access to the internet. Urgent action is needed to update these rules and bring them into the digital age to help keep children and young people safe from gambling harm.”
The post GambleAware Warns Outdated Gambling Advertising and Marketing Regulations are Leaving Children at Risk of Gambling Harm appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
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Betbazar’s AI Revolution: Where Algorithms Play and Humans Watch
Max Sevostianov, CCO at Betbazar, reveals how AI Cricket blurs the line between sport, tech and entertainment — creating a 24/7 AI sports universe — where every match feels alive and every second counts.
- How did the idea of creating AI-driven Cricket come about?
It started from our roots in Live Data Feed and Live Content. We constantly saw the same demand from operators worldwide — they needed fast, round-the-clock sports content that actually feels alive. Traditional virtuals didn’t cut it anymore; they were too static, too predictable.
Cricket, with its global fanbase and built-in drama, became the perfect playground for something new. We wanted to merge sports logic, AI, and entertainment to create a product that doesn’t just simulate a match — it lives one. That’s how AI Cricket was born: a fast, emotional, and unpredictable experience built for the next generation who expect energy, not repetition.
- What market gap does this product fill – and which Operators or regions is it most relevant for?The biggest gap we saw was the “dead zone” between traditional virtuals and real sports. Virtual games looked repetitive and lifeless, while real matches were limited by schedules and logistics. Bettors were stuck between predictability and waiting.
AI Cricket closes that gap completely. It runs 24/7, behaves like a real sport with live odds movement, and keeps the unpredictability that makes real competition exciting. It’s already resonating strongly in cricket-driven regions — India, Bangladesh, Australia, and across Africa — where players crave constant, authentic action that never sleeps.
- AI Cricket offers a short dynamic format (3–6 minutes). How does it align with the behavior trends of the Next Generation of bettors?Today’s bettors live in a scroll culture. They want action, not waiting. The next generation grew up on TikTok clips, Reels, and esports rounds that last minutes, not hours. That shift completely changed attention patterns — and we built AI Cricket for that world.
Each match lasts just 3 to 6 minutes — quick, intense and rewarding. It’s snackable entertainment with real IGaming logic behind it. Players can jump in, experience the thrill, and move on — or stay for hours of back-to-back action that never loses momentum.
- How exactly does the AI model work to make every match unpredictable and “alive”?Behind every match is a living algorithm. Our AI engine processes thousands of variables — team stats, player behavior, pitch and weather conditions, even dynamic momentum shifts. It learns from real cricket patterns but never repeats itself.
That’s what makes it unpredictable — no scripted loops, no recycled outcomes. Every delivery, every wicket, carries its own story. You can literally feel the rhythm of the game changing, just like in live sports. That’s where the emotion comes from — not from animation, but from intelligence.
- How customisable is the product for each Operator’s brand?
We built AI Cricket to be more than a plug-and-play product — it’s a canvas for each Operator’s brand. Our customisation layer lets partners design branded tournaments with their own visuals, logos, and atmosphere.
That means every sportsbook can offer something that feels exclusive — not “another virtual,” but their cricket universe. It’s a powerful way to build loyalty and keep players coming back, because the experience looks, sounds and plays like it truly belongs to that Operator.
- Does Betbazar plan to expand the AI-driven approach to other sports as well?
Absolutely — Cricket was just the opening chapter. The core AI engine we’ve built is flexible enough to adapt to any sport with a short, dynamic format. We’re already experimenting with new disciplines that share the same DNA: fast action, unpredictability, and constant engagement. Our goal is to create a full AI-driven sports universe.
- How do you see AI-powered Content evolving in the iGaming industry over the next 2-3 years?
AI-powered content transforms iGaming by making it faster to test ideas, launch products, and measure results. It turns IGaming into a form of entertainment — offering new, immersive experiences rather than just odds and outcomes. It’s a powerful way for Operators to experiment with different hypotheses, understand player behaviour, and adapt their sportsbook in real time. The line between sports, gaming, and entertainment is fading — and we want Betbazar to lead that evolution.
About Betbazar
Betbazar is a product-first iGaming technology company that empowers Operators with profitable solutions. From low-latency Live Data Feed and AI-driven products to a Turnkey Platform and Sportsbook Solutions, the company delivers performance, reliability and growth Operators need to stay ahead. Betbazar is a long-term technology partner, helping Operators integrate faster, operate smarter and scale stronger.
Website: https://betbazar.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/betbazar
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