Gaming
Exclusive Q&A with Alexandre Salem, Global Director of Gaming Partnerships at Huawei
We have had an enlightening interview with Alexandre Salem, Global Director of Gaming Partnerships at Huawei.
Here he talks about the Huawei Gaming Ecosystem, how it’s gearing up to challenge the near duopoly Google Playstore and Apple Appstore, and why game developers shouldn’t miss it.
Here is the full text of the interview.
Q. Let us begin with a brief introduction to the Huawei Gaming Ecosystem. How does it help to facilitate the ultimate mobile gaming experience for users?
A. AppGallery is the official app distribution platform at Huawei, and the third-largest app marketplace in the world. We’ve designed it as a gateway to some of the latest and most exciting mobile game experiences for consumers.
When we look at the increase in people gaming around the world, it’s clear just how significant a role app marketplaces will have to play. We’re looking at 3.2 billion global gamers by 2023, and from that we’re predicting over two thirds will be on a mobile device.
To drive the global growth that we’re seeing, we provide our developers with the innovative technology they need to create the ultimate gaming experiences for their customers. Developers can integrate with elements of Huawei’s HMS Core for example to harness the unique software and hardware capabilities – all in the name of imagining new gameplay for mobile gamers.
There’s also the choice of integrating with app development tools for different Huawei devices, enabling gamers to switch between a MatePad and a P40, for example, with little effort and an overall seamless and enjoyable experience.
We’re already proud of our reputation for building quality hardware to facilitate a superior gaming experience for users, bringning some really unique gameplay to the table. Take Perfect World Games’ ReEvolve, for example. It’s the first mobile game that you can play on folding screen technology.
We’re also continuously looking to grow the number of mobile games available on AppGallery, with the aim of establishing Huawei as a true powerhouse of mobile gaming. Last year for example we launched a one-stop gaming platform for our more committed gamers called GameCenter, promoting an even richer gaming experience to those interested in exclusive discounts, unique gameplay and an exciting reward scheme. While AppGallery is Huawei’s comprehensive marketplace for all app categories, users who particularly love games can download GameCenter for an end-to-end game service.
Q. Could you provide some key stats regarding the number of users, games and developers in the Huawei Gaming Ecosystem currently?
A. AppGallery’s progress is something we’re really excited about. Considering the platform is only three years old in overseas markets, we already have a huge selection of convenient, fun and innovative gaming options to choose from. AppGallery caters to the different interests of its committed mobile gamers, from role-playing, action, MOBA, and MMORPG, to puzzle, turn-based and idle games.
In line with the growth of mobile gaming that we’re seeing more generally, AppGallery is also expanding – there are now 500% more games available on the platform compared to a year ago. Our users are often amongst the first to experience innovative new gameplay from around the world, with launches from the past year including AFK Arena, Asphalt 9: Legends, Clash of Kings and many more.
AppGallery continues to see strong growth in gaming availability, with over 12,000 games available and over 80 million games installed overall. Furthermore, there has been a 100% growth in games revenue in 2020 compared to 2019, and a 120% growth in paying players.
Thanks to the ongoing development of the HMS ecosystem, AppGallery now has 540 million monthly active users. There are 2.7 million registered developers worldwide, 134,000 apps integrated with HMS Core and, in 2020, we saw 384.4 billion app distributions (174 billion more than the previous year) – many of which are attributable to the mobile gaming sector.
Q. Huawei AppGallery boldly attempts to challenge the near duopoly of Google Play store and the App Store. What do developers and publishers gain exclusively by choosing AppGallery?
A. Something that sets AppGallery apart from competitors is the close relationship that we have with developers. We work closely with our partners to identify their own aspirations and desires – and not just in the gaming space.
Something that receives a lot of great feedback from developers and mobile users alike is our dedication to technical and marketing support. We implement a “Global + Local” Strategy, designed to help developers utilise our platform. It works both ways, because not only are we supporting smaller developers at the local level, but we’re also providing our diverse global customer base with the most relevant apps and games for them.
We also provide one-stop, full-spectrum operational support for developers worldwide, covering the entire development cycle. From ideation, development, distribution, operation to data analytics for global developers, we’re there to help. And the partnership doesn’t end at launch – we have dedicated teams to provide ongoing business and commercial support.
Building an ecosystem from scratch is something that takes a lot of time – we’ve been working on this for three years and the progress is so exciting. We’ll continue to prioritise our partners, providing them with an opportunity to tap into the competitive mobile market.
Another differentiating benefit we bring to our gaming partners is an in-depth expertise in the Chinese market, the largest in the world in players number and revenue. For the developers interested in penetrating this market, we can bring a suite of tailor-made services to maximize the chances of success.
Q. Tell us about the advantages and support that game developers can enjoy as part of the Huawei Ecosystem.
Mobile gaming is a huge market and one that is growing significantly. Something that we advocate for at Huawei is helping developers to get their foot on the ladder and grow within an increasingly competitive space.
With this in mind, we empower local developers with our on-the-ground support. We now have five global developer centres in Romania, Egypt, Mexico, Malaysia and Russia. We also have three ecosystem labs in Germany, Poland and Russia, as well as over 20 online Huawei Developer Day (HDD) events throughout the year. Developers can also utilise the seven DigiX Lab Innovation laboratories – they’re based in Dublin, Moscow, Düsseldorf, Mexico, Dubai, Johannesburg and Singapore. Here, developers can access real machine debugging, development capability experiences and other tools and guidance.
Our collaboration with developers doesn’t stop when a game is on-boarded in AppGallery. Our goal is to support gaming developers in attracting, converting and retaining as many players as possible. We don’t hesitate to roll up our sleeves alongside our gaming partners to run co-marketing campaigns to boost games discoverability.
Q. What are the options for monetization and the advertisement support that publishers can enjoy as part of the Huawei Ecosystem?
A. Something that we’re passionate about at Huawei is aligning our partners’ business development goals with the tools they need to achieve them. There are a variety of different HMS Core Kits that developers can choose to integrate with to harness the unique software and hardware capabilities we have on offer.
This includes the Huawei Ads Kit which empowers developers to create high-quality and personalized ads within their apps. Alongside the easy-to-use Publisher Service, developers can work seamlessly with third-party advertising and tracking platforms to monitor ad success. We also have a range of platforms to encourage our partners to boost their revenue, from the traffic monetization platform − a one-stop platform for developers to earn more − to advertising identifiers and conversion attributions.
In a nutshell, we provide a flexible set of services for gaming developers to fit their business models, whether they monetize through IAP, ads, premium paid games or a mix of those revenue streams.
Q. Could you enlighten us on the user data protection measures that Huawei has taken to ensure that the personal information of users is not compromised? This is probably an area where even the biggest companies on the internet have an inconsistent record.
A. AppGallery has a full-cycle security and protection system, including developer real-name verification, a four-step review process, download and installation protection as well as a prevention mechanism for secure app operation. Protecting user privacy and security is something that we take very seriously.
In addition to ensuring that all default apps fully comply with privacy compliance requirements, EMUI provides permit management, notification management, audio/video reminders, location service management and other privacy settings for apps, giving users visibility and control over their permissions.
Huawei has also established local data storage in six regional centres and 15 data centres worldwide. Complying with the localized service distribution and deployment policy, personal information is encrypted and stored in the area to which the user belongs. For example, Huawei stores all European user data in Germany, where rules and regulations call for the highest standards of user privacy.
To further ensure the safety of our users, we have implemented an age rating system globally, which intelligently blocks non-age-appropriate content according to user settings to provide a safe and healthy application environment for underage users.
Q. Huawei is betting big on the Internet of Things (IoT). How do you think the IoT is going to make its mark in the gaming sector?
A. In two years’, time, we expect to see 2.6 billion gamers streaming and competing together on mobile devices. The IoT is another area where we have a reputation for taking the lead and driving an industrial-scale digital transformation. Through our all-scenario, modular solutions, we’ll ensure that our mobile gamers have access to the smoothest possible gameplay experience.
In the next few years, we expect to see gamers having access to an increasing number of smart devices and wanting to play their favourite games in a frictionless manner across those devices. Let’s imagine the following user journey: a gamer might receive a notification on their smart watch reminding them to a play the next shooter game level. They might pass a few levels during the commute to work on a smartphone, and continue playing at home on a tablet, before competing with friends on a smart TV over the weekend. This type of cross-device and cross-platform gameplay will require developers to evolve their game development practices. It will mean that we need to bring hardware and software making this “omni-channel gaming” possible.
Q. Finally, what are Huawei’s major initiatives in the near future to deliver the ultimate mobile gaming experience?
A. Our top priority remains our users – we’ll continue to provide them with access to the best, most relevant mobile games in the world. There are a number of unique ways in which we’re able to do this. For example, we listen to our global customers’ needs through Wishlist – a tool that AppGallery users can use to recommend an app that they’d like to see available on the platform.
We also have staff dedicated to reading users’ feedback in Wishlist and analysing apps with the most votes. This allows us to prioritise the most wanted apps and ensure that consumer appeal is addressed, so that AppGallery is adapting to the fast-changing mobile app landscape.
We are also keeping in mind gamers needs and preferences when we design and launch new hardware on the market. I am extremely excited about our line-up of smartphones, smart TVs, connected watches and other devices and I am intimately convinced that this hardware ecosystem will bring the gaming experience to a new level.
Looking at the growth that the gaming industry has seen this year alone, it’s our mission to ensure that Huawei remains at the forefront of mobile gaming.
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Exprexion
Flexion Launches Mobile Service Suite Exprexion
Games marketing company Flexion has announced the launch of Exprexion. This integrated suite of services provides game developers with a single point of entry to alternative app stores, creator-led marketing and direct-to-consumer sales.
The mobile gaming industry is entering a new era. After years of market domination by Google and Apple, game studios are looking for ways to be in command of their own destiny. High store taxes and rising acquisition costs have squeezed profits for too long. The Exprexion suite of services gives developers the freedom to innovate in market engagement and express their ideas directly to users, moving beyond the traditional constraints of the major app stores.
The Exprexion suite consists of three core services:
Exprexion Markets: This service manages all the technical and operational requirements of distributing games on alternative platforms including Amazon, Samsung, Huawei, Xiaomi and ONEstore. Flexion handles everything from integration to platform relations, typically adding more than 10% in incremental revenue. By taking on these tasks, Flexion reduces upfront and operational costs for developers while reducing risk.
Exprexion Creators: This service focuses on influencer-led marketing and social media strategy. By managing the creative process and relationships with influencers, Flexion helps studios find high-value players who engage with games through organic interest. This approach allows developers to reach bigger audiences through broader market channels and innovative user acquisition.
Exprexion Direct: This service enables developers to sell to their players no matter where those players are. By moving transactions outside of the major app stores, studios can make better margins and reclaim the 30% fee typically charged by platform owners. The service uses proven payment technology from trusted suppliers, like Xsolla, to ensure the buying experience remains smooth.
“The mobile industry has reached a point where the old methods of finding and monetizing players are no longer sustainable for many game studios. For years, developers accepted high fees and limited data access as the cost of doing business. Now, the emergence of a more open market and the shift toward direct-to-consumer relationships have changed the math. We launched Exprexion because the market is finally in a place where developers can feasibly run their own stores and distribution networks without the massive operational overhead that used to hold them back,” said Jens Lauritzson, CEO and Founder of Flexion.
Flexion’s technology, people and expertise are unique in the mobile market. The Exprexion services are fully integrated with one another, meaning each service perfectly complements the others. They can be combined seamlessly or used in any combination to generate profit and grow audiences bigger than ever before.
Flexion currently manages 37 top-grossing games. Four of these titles have reached the Top 10 grossing charts on Google Play. By providing a decentralised path to growth, Exprexion serves as a vehicle for a studio’s financial freedom.
The post Flexion Launches Mobile Service Suite Exprexion appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Funding
EasyWin closes second seed round at $20m valuation
Real-money casual puzzle tournament startup says an EU private investor backed the April 2026 round.
EasyWin, a U.S.-based real-money gaming startup, said it has closed its second seed funding round at a $20 million valuation. The company announced the round in April 2026 and said it was backed by a private investor from the European Union.
The company previously closed its first seed round in December 2025 at a $15.5 million valuation. That round included funding from Velo Partners, Vladimir Nikolsky and several private angel investors.
EasyWin was founded by Ivan Leshkevich, a former executive at mobile game publisher and developer Mamboo Entertainment. The startup, which currently has a team of eight, says it has built a global tournament platform for casual puzzle games with cash prizes and operates across major markets.
Since launching in 2025, EasyWin reported 25% month-over-month growth in user spending and a 4.9 average user rating. It also said it has expanded into 12 countries with localized legal opinions and payment infrastructure, received PayPal approval for its MCC, and completed payments-stack integrations with global providers.
The company also said it has obtained GLI certification “confirming compliance with U.S. regulations for skill-based gaming products.” Leshkevich said: “In the long term, we aim to become a leading global skill-based gaming platform. To achieve this, we focus on a strong product USP and new AI-based dev tools.”
The post EasyWin closes second seed round at $20m valuation appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Gaming
Why Some Slot Themes Perform Better in Different Markets
A slot that breaks records in Las Vegas can flop in Stockholm. One that prints money across Macau might leave Western players scratching their heads.
It happens all the time, and it’s rarely an accident.
Player taste is shaped by culture, regulation, storytelling habits, and even the kind of phone someone uses to play. Once you start digging into why some themes win in some markets and stall in others, the patterns get pretty clear.
Cultural Influence on Slot Theme Preferences
People are drawn to what feels familiar. Mythology, history, and cultural symbols come pre-loaded with meaning, which makes recognition easier from the very first spin.
A Norse warrior slot lands differently for a player in Gothenburg than it does for one in Tokyo. The imagery taps into stories already living in their cultural memory.
That’s why certain themes punch above their weight when matched to the right region. Norse mythology peaks in Northern Europe. Dragons and koi fish dominate East Asia. Ancient Egypt, oddly enough, travels almost everywhere thanks to decades of pop-culture exposure.
Developers have noticed. They’re now drilling into culturally specific micro-niches, drawing on real historical detail rather than recycling tired clichés. Modern players spot lazy localization in seconds, and they punish it.
Visual Style and Regional Design Preferences
Aesthetic expectations also shift sharply between regions.
Some markets prefer clean, minimal interfaces with uncluttered reels and easy-to-read paytables. Others want vibrant colors, dense animation, and constant movement on screen.
Asian markets typically gravitate toward red-and-gold palettes, ornate symbol design, and celebratory sound effects. Nordic players tend to favor sleeker, video-game-quality production with restrained visuals.
The slots that travel best find a way to keep universal appeal while quietly localizing the small stuff. That might mean dialing back color saturation, swapping out the soundtrack to fit local musical tastes, or tweaking pacing so wins feel either explosive or steady depending on who’s playing.
These details look minor on paper. They often decide whether a title sticks in a market or vanishes within weeks.
Popular Slot Themes Across Global Markets
North America leans hard into entertainment-driven, jackpot-focused titles. Branded slots tied to films, TV, and music do well, alongside progressive heavyweights like Mega Moolah and Wheel of Fortune. Big-win marketing and instant brand recognition carry a lot of weight here.
American-themed slots featuring buffalo imagery, Vegas iconography, and Wild West motifs also remain strong sellers. Coverage of American-themed slots shows how patriotic visuals and classic three-reel formats keep pulling loyal audiences across regulated US states.
Asia is dominated by themes built around luck and prosperity. Titles like 88 Fortunes and Dragon Link work because their symbols — gold ingots, dragons, lanterns, festival imagery — connect directly to long-standing beliefs about fortune.
Interestingly, Asian-themed slots also perform unusually well in Latin America. A lot of that comes down to early market exposure: Asian providers entered those markets first and shaped player taste before Western developers caught up.
Europe, including Sweden and the wider Nordics, favors adventure and mythology. Book of Dead, Vikings Go Berzerk, Starburst, and Gonzo’s Quest stay popular because they hit a sweet spot between accessible gameplay and strong storytelling.
Sweden has a deeper connection to these games than most. Many of them — Starburst and Gonzo’s Quest among them — were built by Swedish studios like NetEnt and Play’n GO right out of Stockholm.
Regional Market Trends and Player Behaviour
Behavior itself varies by region, not just taste.
Some markets gravitate toward high-volatility gameplay with rare but massive payouts. Others prefer steadier, low-risk experiences that stretch session length.
North American players often chase jackpot potential and the dream of life-changing wins. Asian markets emphasize symbol-rich, visually intense gameplay where the experience itself is the reward.
Nordic markets sit somewhere in the middle. Swedish players in particular are known for analytical play. They want transparent mechanics like Megaways and Hold & Win, and they tend to stick with trusted, familiar titles rather than chasing every new release.
Industry data from Evolution, the group behind Swedish slot pioneers NetEnt and Red Tiger, points to Swedish-built slots having set the bar for production quality. That’s part of why local players hold such high expectations.
How Platforms Adapt Slot Libraries for Different Regions
Players don’t usually find their favorite slots by accident. Online casino comparison platforms do a lot of the heavy lifting.
These sites curate libraries based on local taste, regulation, and language. They cut through thousands of available titles and surface the ones that actually fit a given market.
In Sweden, this is especially noticeable. An online casino comparison site such as casinohallen.se tends to spotlight the slots that resonate most with Nordic players — Starburst for its clean design and steady low-volatility wins, Book of Dead for its Egyptian adventure framing, Gonzo’s Quest for its cascading Avalanche mechanic, and Reactoonz for its quirky character-driven gameplay.
The same logic applied in North America would push jackpot networks and branded titles to the top. An Asian-focused platform would lead with dragon and prosperity themes.
The role of these comparison sites isn’t just to list options. They act as cultural filters, surfacing the games most likely to actually click with a specific local audience.
Game Design Elements That Influence Global Success
Mechanics carry as much weight as themes.
Free spins, cascading reels, expanding wilds, bonus multipliers, and Megaways-style variable paylines all amplify theme performance when they line up with the narrative.
Book of Dead works because the expanding symbol mechanic feels like uncovering an ancient secret. An adventure slot needs progression. A prosperity slot needs symbols that feel ceremonial when they land. Mismatch the mechanic and the theme, and the whole thing feels off.
Globally successful slots tend to share a formula: simple core gameplay, a recognizable theme, and one or two distinctive mechanics. That combination travels well without losing identity.
As Slots 101 coverage on slot fundamentals points out, the genre’s real strength is how easily it adapts. A few tweaks to symbols, sound, and volatility can transform the same underlying game into something that feels native almost anywhere.
In the end, slot performance is a reflection of the player. Get the cultural fit right, match the mechanics to local risk appetite, and respect regional aesthetic expectations — and a slot can quietly become a market favorite for years.
The post Why Some Slot Themes Perform Better in Different Markets appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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