Latest News
Interview with GAMING1’s David Carrion: “Our objective is to be competitive locally, with a global product.”
GAMING1 is already known as one of Europe’s most successful gaming and sports betting partners, as well as for its recent entrance into the EGR Power 50 for its exciting in-house operator brands.
However, the last two years have also seen huge growth for its Betly brand across the US – in partnership with Delaware North, which now spans Arkansas, Tennessee, West Virginia and Ohio.
To get the latest on the company’s huge success in North and South America, we thought it would be the perfect time to sit down with David Carrion, Chief Operating Officer Interactive at GAMING1, to learn more.
The last two years have seen huge growth for GAMING1 in the US, including the launch of Betly, your joint venture with Delaware North, in Arkansas, Tennessee, West Virginia and Ohio. How is it going so far and what are your key learnings?
The USA market is different than Europe in terms of Sports betting. The customer has a history of fantasy sports, which are sports betting based on individual player combinations. Historically players created teams that mixed their favourite players across multiple teams. This is a key difference to the history of the European online betting customer, who normally follows a team before a player.
This has created the development of a way of betting called single game parlay, where players can combine bets of their favorite players, together with a team to win for example. This creates a significant adjustment to risk and pricing models as well as the actual offer of such product.
The summary is that Sports betting in USA is different, and we continue to learn and evolve our offer. By the launch of American football season in September, we will have a more competitive product and will be able to assess better the future.
We have also learned that the distance and the time difference make things more difficult, that our cultural differences require attention and that it is a very competitive market in terms of marketing spend.
The biggest learning so far, is that we should be very strategical on the states where we decide to operate, as our partner is very well placed for success in some of the states, like Arkansas or West Virginia, while other States are not as interesting so far, like Ohio or Tennessee (this part of our learnings).”
GAMING1 has previously showed strong interest in the Casino vertical given your success in South America as the first to go live in Colombia. How is this area developing for you and in which US markets do you see having the most potential growth?
We are a Casino-first company, it is the dominant share of revenues in our verticals and is our DNA. Our loyalty, club, CRM and rewards approach has been our staple as a strong Casino operator, together with our own offer of proprietary games in our core markets.
As we expand into new markets, we aim to leverage our tech and our approach, as we learn to adapt to each market, starting with the content offer but also with nuances to our core platform. Our objective is to be competitive locally, with a global product. That takes time to develop, and our entire tech stack is being developed with that in mind. Our operating model is also evolving to support this approach. We are very excited about our current trajectory and the immediate future.
In regard to the USA, we prefer to be very strategic in our choices of states. Taxes, the size of the market, the number of competitors, are all considerations to keep in mind before jumping into the void of launching on a new State. Mistakes can be costly and miscalculations in strategy can set you down in time. For now, we lean on the strengths of our partner Delaware North and their current presence in Live Gaming that can be leveraged where iGaming is also regulated.
How do you expect the current emphasis on responsible gaming in the UK and Europe to affect US regulation going forward? How do you stay flexible to the demands of various state regulators?
Europe is having an influence in the early stages of development of the USA iGaming industry, but we can already see strong local trends in terms of player preferences for example. Regulators are new to our industry, but they learn fast, and I think we already see a very dynamic market. In summary, yes, we already see adoption of similar rules, but I would expect USA to be fast in adapting and to take full control on their approach and its development.
What trends and betting behaviours have you observed in your US players and which verticals are really taking off for your brand?
Big companies, big marketing spenders, fast and high-quality products. That seems to be the strategy of the top 4 or 5 companies in USA. The main behavior we observe is that if you are not one of those, you get 4th hand, or 5th hand customers. Customers who are mostly seeking the value of your offers are not that interested in staying, unless your product is incredibly superior, which is very, very hard to do, if not impossible. We see a lot of trial and error and very hard to achieve good retention in the competitive markets.
In contrast, player value seems attractive, and adoption is impressive, so the future is bright once this initial stage of dominance through massive advertisement budgets is over – which enables a new equilibrium where we can all find our realistic competitive positioning.
Last but not least, after a massively successful 2022, what are your hopes for 2023 and do you have your sights set on any new markets?
We continue to grow strong in our Central European markets and we remain confident of our future in USA. This year has been all about getting to market in time, while we continue to consolidate our operating model. A lot of groundwork has been put in this year – work we will now be able to leverage on 2024 across multiple markets. We look forward to a 2024 where we make significant progress in our product and our quality, where we break through with our improved architecture and new capability teams and where we consolidate our talent and people to continue our pursuit to reach unstoppable momentum. It’s certainly an exciting time for us!
Latest News
N1 Beyond the Insights: Facebook in July
Every month, N1 Insights features N1 Partners experts sharing their perspective on the latest developments in the iGaming industry. But these insights are only part of the bigger picture. Behind every prediction lies market analysis, hands-on experience, and real-world cases that deserve a deeper discussion.
That’s why we’re launching N1 Beyond the Insights — a new series where N1 Partners experts take a closer look at the industry’s most important topics, share in-depth analysis, and explore the nuances that help affiliates make better traffic decisions.
In our first edition, we focus on Facebook: the seasonal shifts that typically occur in July, the metrics that matter most, and why evaluating campaign performance requires looking beyond surface-level results and analyzing the entire user journey.
False Signals: When a Drop in CTR and CR Doesn’t Mean Your Campaign Is Failing
In July, traditional advertising metrics can be misleading — even for experienced media buyers. One of the most common mistakes is treating a decline in CTR and CR as a clear sign that a campaign has burned out and should be turned off.
In reality, the cause is often a seasonal shift in user behaviour rather than the campaign itself. During the summer, people spend more time on mobile devices, travel more, and generally devote less attention to social media. They scroll through their feeds faster, which naturally leads to lower CTR and registration conversion rates, even when the campaign continues to attract high-quality traffic.
This is where many affiliates make costly mistakes. They see performance drop in their tracker, pause campaigns that are still delivering value, and start testing new creatives, spending additional budget to solve a problem that may not actually exist.
The N1 Partners Approach
In situations like these, the N1 Partners team avoids drawing conclusions based solely on the first signs of declining advertising metrics.
Instead, we look at the full picture by analysing:
- user cohorts;
- the time between registration and first deposit;
- post-click user behaviour;
- overall campaign profitability.
During the summer, it’s especially important to allow the entire conversion cycle to unfold before evaluating performance. A user may click on an ad during the day but only complete registration or make a first deposit later that evening or even over the weekend.
Our team also recommends adapting creatives to seasonal user behaviour. Shorter funnels, clear messaging, and offers built around fast or instant-play games tend to perform better during the summer, as they require less time and commitment from users who are often browsing on the go.
Night-Time Traffic: Why a Lower CPC Doesn’t Always Mean Higher ROI
Another seasonal trend in July is the shift in user activity patterns.
Across many Tier-1 markets, longer daylight hours and warmer weather change how people spend their time. Users are generally less active on social media during the day, with engagement gradually moving into the late evening and overnight hours.
Facebook adapts quickly to these behavioural changes, allocating more impressions during peak activity periods — typically between 10:00 PM and 3:00 AM local time.
For affiliates, this can initially look like an opportunity:
- lower CPC;
- higher traffic volume;
- more registrations.
However, these metrics don’t necessarily translate into better campaign performance. A lower acquisition cost doesn’t automatically mean higher-quality traffic or stronger long-term profitability, which is why it’s important to evaluate the full conversion funnel rather than relying on CPC alone.
| What the Ads Manager Shows | What’s Actually Happening |
| Lower CPC | Users are more likely to browse their feeds without taking action. |
| More Registrations | A smaller share of users progresses to making a quality first deposit. |
| Higher traffic volume | More registrations fail to convert into long-term revenue. |
During late-night hours in Tier-1 markets, additional factors can affect deposit conversion:
- users may reach their daily card spending limits;
- banks often perform scheduled maintenance and security updates overnight;
- declined payment rates tend to increase.
As a result, affiliates may see a high number of registrations while the conversion rate from registration to first deposit declines.
The N1 Partners Approach
At N1 Partners, we don’t recommend limiting campaigns to night-time hours through dayparting simply because CPC appears lower.
While daytime traffic is often more expensive, users acquired during the day and early evening are generally more likely to complete meaningful deposits and deliver stronger long-term value. Rather than optimizing for the lowest acquisition cost, we recommend evaluating traffic quality across the entire conversion funnel and optimizing for overall campaign profitability.
Metrics That Help You Spot Problems Before Your Competitors
Today, Facebook campaign analysis goes far beyond CTR, CPC, and registration volume. If a campaign continues to generate high-quality traffic while ROI starts to decline, the issue isn’t necessarily on Facebook’s side.
At N1 Partners, one of the earliest warning signs we monitor is payment infrastructure performance. Changes in payment metrics often reveal underlying issues before they become visible in overall campaign results.
The first metrics we analyze include:
| Metric | What It Indicates |
| Success Rate | The share of successful payments compared to failed transactions. |
| Decline Rate | Whether payment failures are increasing over time. |
| Reg-to-Dep | How efficiently registrations convert into first-time depositors. |
| FTD | First deposit |
During the summer, banks in Tier-1 markets regularly update their payment gateways, adjust transaction limits, and introduce changes to payment processing. Even a 5–10% increase in the Decline Rate over a few hours can indicate an underlying technical issue.
Teams that focus solely on the number of first-time deposits often detect these problems too late. Monitoring Success Rate and Decline Rate allows affiliates to identify issues much earlier and adjust their campaigns before performance is significantly affected.
Why It’s Harder to Kill Underperforming Campaigns in July
During the summer, finding a new winning campaign is often easier than knowing when to stop running an existing one. Lower CPCs driven by reduced competition in Facebook’s ad auction can create the illusion that a temporary performance dip will eventually correct itself.
In reality, many affiliates fall into the trap of delayed conversions, attributing weaker results solely to seasonality. More often, the issue lies with the traffic itself rather than the product. During the summer, Tier-1 users respond differently to gambling creatives, while Facebook’s algorithms gradually optimize delivery toward less engaged audiences.
Instead of continuing to scale a declining campaign in the hope that retention will improve later, it’s usually more effective to pause underperforming setups early and reallocate budget to testing new angles and creatives that better match July’s seasonal demand.
Deep Localization: Which GEOs Need It Most?
These seasonal shifts are particularly noticeable in mature Tier-1 markets such as Germany, Austria, and Canada.
Users in these markets have been exposed to gambling advertising for years. They’ve seen countless welcome bonuses, promotional offers, and product concepts, making it much harder for generic campaigns to stand out. Simply increasing a welcome bonus is no longer a meaningful competitive advantage.
At N1 Partners, we take a broader product-driven approach that focuses on:
- deep product localization;
- personalized retention strategies;
- VIP mechanics;
- local payment methods;
- a user experience tailored to the specifics of each market.
Summer also changes how users interact with products. People spend more time away from home, rely more heavily on mobile devices, and switch between content more quickly. At the same time, major sporting events remain a powerful driver of engagement. Products optimized for mobile, fast gameplay, and user journeys that naturally fit summer behaviour tend to deliver the strongest results.
At the same time, lower-cost traffic in Latin America and Asia can be misleading. High registration volumes don’t necessarily translate into strong profitability, especially when optimization focuses on installs or registrations rather than first-time deposits and long-term player value.
Why Brands Are Prioritizing Quality Over Volume
Over the past few months, brands have significantly changed the way they evaluate affiliate traffic. The focus has shifted from traffic volume to user quality and long-term value.
Today, affiliates are increasingly expected to provide transparent source-level reporting, full-funnel analytics, traffic segmentation, and insights into the quality of the acquired audience.
As a result, the best commercial terms are no longer reserved exclusively for the largest affiliates.
According to N1 Partners, the key differentiators today are:
- strong expertise in traffic analytics;
- the ability to quickly identify changes in the registration-to-deposit conversion rate;
- fast campaign optimization and decision-making;
- stable LTV and healthy DepSum/Payout economics;
- transparent communication between affiliates and affiliate managers.
This approach enables long-term partnerships and sustainable growth—even without continuously increasing traffic volumes.
Key Takeaway
Seasonality changes user behaviour, Facebook’s algorithms adjust traffic distribution, and traditional advertising metrics are no longer enough to evaluate campaign performance.
At N1 Partners, we recommend taking a full-funnel approach by looking beyond CTR, CPC, and registration volume. Instead, evaluate user cohorts, Success Rate, Decline Rate, deposit quality, and overall ROI to make more informed optimization decisions.
Work with N1 Partners and Turn Insights into Results
- 14+ casino and sportsbook brands with strong Reg2Dep conversion
- 10+ Tier-1 GEOs
- CPA up to €700 and RevShare up to 55%, plus NNCO for top-performing affiliates
Be number one with N1!
Awards
Esportes Gaming Brasil lands three brand nominations at Reclame Aqui Awards 2026
Esportes Gaming Brasil (EGB) says all three of its brands—Esportes da Sorte, Onabet and Lottu—have been shortlisted for the Reclame Aqui Awards 2026, a Brazilian awards programme focused on corporate reputation and customer relationships. The group announced the nominations on Thursday 16th July.
EGB said it is the first time the three brands have been nominated simultaneously. Esportes da Sorte is shortlisted in the Ultra Sports Betting Operators (Mega Operations) category, while Onabet and Lottu are in the Sports Betting Operators (Mega Operations) category.
“Receiving nominations for all three Group brands at the Reclame Aqui Awards for the first time is incredibly meaningful recognition of the work we carry out every day. More than simply an achievement, it reflects our consistent strategy of putting the customer at the centre of every decision by investing in technology, operational efficiency and personalised customer service to build long-term relationships based on trust,” said Maria Neves, Director of Customer Experience, Customer Support and Reputation Channels at Esportes Gaming Brasil.
The company attributed the nominations to ongoing investment in customer service processes, technology integration, employee training and changes to the user journey across its brands. EGB also said it reduced average response time for human customer support from 30 minutes to two minutes.
Reclame Aqui Awards winners are decided by consumer voting, according to the company. Public voting for the 2026 edition is scheduled to run from 2 September to 5 November.
The post Esportes Gaming Brasil lands three brand nominations at Reclame Aqui Awards 2026 appeared first on EE Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Alberta
Gaming Corps goes live with bet365 in Alberta on regulated market day one
Deal expands bet365 casino rollout in Spain and Ontario, with 50+ Gaming Corps titles certified for Alberta from 13 July 2026.
Gaming Corps has launched with bet365 in Alberta on the first day of the province’s regulated iGaming market opening (13 July 2026), while also expanding its content footprint with the operator in Spain and Ontario.
The Sweden-based, publicly listed game developer said it is among the first wave of studios certified for Alberta, supporting bet365’s entry with more than 50 games available at launch. The day-one portfolio spans Slots, Table, Plinko, Mine Games and Instant Blitz.
Gaming Corps said the expanded partnership includes its football-themed titles, including Penalty Champion: Goals to Glory, plus the 3 Pigs series (3 Pigs of Olympus, 3 Pigs of Olympus 2: Rise of the DemiHog and 3 Pigs of the Caribbean).
The rollout also brings Gaming Corps’ new Low RTP Blackjack titles to bet365, which the supplier said are designed around 93.57% RTP and approximately 6% operator hold, with side-bet mechanics and flexible branding options.
Graham Greensmith, Chief Commercial Officer at Gaming Corps, said: “Extending our partnership with bet365 across Spain, Ontario and Alberta is a major moment for Gaming Corps, but Alberta is the real statement here. Going live with bet365 from day one reflects the work our teams have put into certification, onboarding and ensuring we can move quickly and confidently with major operator partners.
“As one of the earliest studios ready for Alberta, we’ll be bringing more than 50 titles to the province. That breadth matters, because it gives operators like bet365 a single partner across multiple verticals, with content designed to support acquisition, engagement and retention across different player segments. Spain and Ontario are also important regulated markets for us and expanding with a global operator of this scale highlights how far Gaming Corps has come in a short period of time.”
Richard Graham, Associate VP of Gaming at bet365 at said: “Gaming Corps has become a valuable content partner, combining recognisable game identities with formats that add variety across our casino offering. We are pleased to extend the partnership into Spain, Ontario and Alberta, with the Alberta launch particularly important as part of our day-one commitment to the market.
“Expanding the relationship across multiple territories in a relatively short period reflects the strength of the collaboration, as well as the Gaming Corps team’s clear product direction, commitment and continued development as a game vendor. We look forward to giving players access to a wide-ranging portfolio from the moment the market opens.”
The post Gaming Corps goes live with bet365 in Alberta on regulated market day one appeared first on EE Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
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