As the lines between gaming verticals continue to blur, operators are rethinking how live casino content earns player attention and time on site. A new category, Hybrid Live Casino, is emerging at this intersection, blending the trust and clarity of presenter‑led table games with the spectacle, progression, and feature‑driven energy traditionally associated with RNG mechanics.
One of the clearest expressions of this shift can be seen in ENJOY Gaming’s newest release Energy Roulette, which maintains the familiar cadence of classic roulette while introducing multi‑stage engagement moments, including a feature-rich, slot-style hold and win bonus round, that feel native to the live environment rather than added on.
ENJOY Gaming’s Director of Account Management, Dimokratis Papadimos, discusses the evolution of player behaviour, the commercial opportunity behind Hybrid Live formats, and what it takes for suppliers to design experiences that feel cohesive rather than gimmick‑driven.
How has player behaviour evolved in recent years, particularly in terms of crossover between slots and live casino?
Player behaviour has become far more fluid. Historically, players tended to stay within a single vertical, but that distinction is fading. Today’s player is less concerned with product categories and more focused on the quality of the experience, including the entertainment value, volatility, and engagement. What we’re seeing is a growing overlap between slot and live audiences. Slot players are increasingly exploring live environments, but they bring their expectations with them. They’re looking for feature-driven gameplay, bigger moments, and a sense of progression. At the same time, live players are becoming more open to formats that introduce additional layers of excitement beyond the traditional table experience. This convergence is creating a new type of player who expects the best elements of both worlds, rather than choosing between them.
Slots and live casino have traditionally been treated as distinct verticals. Why do you believe those boundaries are becoming less relevant today?
The distinction was largely shaped by technology and distribution. Slots were built around individual, fast-paced sessions with strong mechanics, while live casino focused on authenticity, trust, and social interaction. But those technical limitations no longer apply in the same way. Streaming quality, UI design, and game engines have evolved to the point where you can begin to blend these experiences seamlessly. More importantly, player expectations have shifted. Players don’t think in terms of “slots” or “live” – they think in terms of entertainment. If a product delivers engagement, transparency, and excitement, the underlying category becomes secondary. As a result, the traditional boundaries are no longer a constraint; they’re an opportunity.
How would you define Hybrid Live, and what makes it more than just adding features to a traditional live game?
Hybrid Live is not about layering mechanics on top of an existing product – it’s about designing a new experience from the ground up that integrates the strengths of both verticals. At its core, Hybrid Live combines three elements: the trust and presence of a live host, the structural clarity of a table game, and the engagement mechanics typically associated with slots. The key is balance. If the feature feels disconnected from the live experience, it loses credibility. If it’s too subtle, it doesn’t add value. A true hybrid is cohesive. The mechanics, pacing, and presentation are all aligned so that the experience feels natural rather than engineered. That’s what differentiates it from simple feature add-ons.
Hold & Win has been a cornerstone mechanic within slots. What are the key challenges and opportunities when adapting a mechanic like this into a presenter-led live format?
Hold & Win has proven to be highly effective within slot games by creating anticipation and a sense of progression, but translating that to a live environment requires careful design. The biggest challenge is preserving the integrity of the live experience. Players need to feel that the game remains transparent and presenter-led, rather than dominated by a feature that could feel detached or overly complex. Timing is also critical. In slots, everything is immediate. In live, pacing must work both for the player triggering the feature and the wider audience watching. The opportunity, however, is significant. When adapted correctly, Hold & Win introduces a multi-stage win journey into live casino – a concept that has traditionally been missing. It transforms a single outcome into an event, building tension and engagement over time. This is where formats like Energy Roulette demonstrate the potential: the base game remains familiar, but the moment of a win becomes more immersive and dynamic.
From an operator perspective, what commercial advantages can hybrid live formats offer in terms of engagement, cross-sell, and differentiation?
Hybrid formats open up several commercial advantages. First, they naturally support cross-sell by appealing to both slot and live audiences within a single product. This reduces friction for players who may be hesitant to switch verticals. Second, they tend to drive deeper engagement. Feature-based gameplay introduces longer session times and more memorable moments, which can positively impact retention. Finally, there is a clear differentiation benefit. The live casino space is highly competitive, and many products follow similar structures. Hybrid Live allows operators to offer something distinctive without moving away from trusted formats like roulette or blackjack. It’s not about replacing existing products – it’s about expanding the portfolio with experiences that stand out.
Do you see Hybrid Live as a short-term innovation cycle, or part of a longer-term evolution in how live casino is designed and consumed? Where does ENJOY see this category developing over the next few years?
This is part of a longer-term structural evolution rather than a short-term trend. The convergence across verticals is driven by player expectations, which will continue to evolve. Looking ahead, we expect Hybrid Live to become a defined category in its own right, with more sophisticated mechanics, stronger visual identity, and deeper levels of interactivity. The challenge for developers will be maintaining simplicity and accessibility while introducing richer experiences. At ENJOY, the focus is on building formats that feel intuitive, scalable, and commercially viable for operators. The goal is not to innovate for the sake of it, but to create products that genuinely reflect how players want to engage with live casino today. Energy Roulette is an early example of that direction, but the broader ambition is to continue exploring how proven mechanics can be reimagined in a live context in a way that feels both authentic and forward-looking.
A strong example of this principle in practice is ENJOY Gaming’s Energy Roulette, which was designed from the outset as a unified hybrid experience rather than a standard table game with bolt-on features. Its live-presented flow remains structurally identical to classic roulette, yet the game introduces organically integrated moments — including a multi-phase Hold & Win bonus round — that elevate the emotional rhythm of play without disrupting familiarity. This illustrates how hybrid mechanics can enhance the genre while still preserving the trust, presence, and clarity that define live casino experiences.
Energy Roulette highlights how this adaptation can succeed when executed thoughtfully. The transition into the Hold & Win feature is triggered within the natural cadence of roulette play, creating a shared event that both the triggering player and the wider audience can follow in real time. The feature maintains the core appeal of Hold & Win — incremental progression, escalating anticipation, and clear win visibility — while remaining fully anchored in a presenter-led environment. This demonstrates how a mechanic traditionally associated with RNG slots can be reimagined in a way that feels live-native rather than imported.



















