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Worldwide Casino Gaming Equipment Industry to 2027 – Featuring Incredible Technologies, International Game Technology and Jackpot Digital Among Others
The “Casino Gaming Equipment Market: Global Industry Trends, Share, Size, Growth, Opportunity and Forecast 2022-2027” report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets‘ offering.
The global casino gaming equipment market reached a value of US$ 11 Billion in 2021. Looking forward, the publisher expects the market to reach US$ 13.2 Billion by 2027, exhibiting a CAGR of 3.1% during 2022-2027. Keeping in mind the uncertainties of COVID-19, they are continuously tracking and evaluating the direct as well as the indirect influence of the pandemic. These insights are included in the report as a major market contributor
Casino gaming equipment are gaming machines and tools used for gambling and ensuring transparency in casino operations. Roulette wheels, gaming tables, shuffle machines, player tracking systems, slot machines, video poker machines and video lottery terminals are some of the commonly used casino gaming equipment.
These machines are used for playing poker, big six-wheel, baccarat, blackjack, craps and five-card draws. The equipment provides enhanced profitability, convenience, safety and cost-effectiveness. They are also utilized for analyzing player behavior and authenticating fake and original currency notes. As a result, casino gaming equipment is widely utilized in malls, casinos and gaming arenas
Casino Gaming Equipment Market Trends:
Significant growth in the commercial casino industry across the globe is creating a positive outlook for the market. Additionally, the shifting consumer preference from traditional casino tables to electronic gaming tables is favoring the market growth. These electronic gaming tables provide an exciting live stadium environment, control the gaming speed, require minimum bets and safeguard the player from betting frauds. In line with this, convenient access to online casinos that can be used through mobile phones is also contributing to the growth of the market.
Moreover, various technological advancements, such as the increasing adoption of the virtual reality (VR), artificial intelligence (AI) and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies in smart casinos, are providing a thrust to the market growth. These technologies aid in maintaining the transparency of gambling activities and provide an immersive experience to the player. They also aid in analyzing player-related data and recognizing symptoms of unhealthy gambling patterns in at-risk players.
Other factors, including the liberalization and cultural acceptance of gambling and casinos in various countries, along with the increasing expenditure capacities of consumers, are anticipated to drive the market toward growth
Key Market Segmentation:
The publisher provides an analysis of the key trends in each sub-segment of the global casino gaming equipment market, along with forecasts at the global, regional and country level from 2022-2027. Our report has categorized the market based on product type, installation, mode of operation and end user
Breakup by Product Type:
- Slot Machines
- Video Lottery Terminal
- Video Poker Machines
- Others
Breakup by Installation:
- Installed Inside Casino
- Installed Outside Casino
Breakup by Mode of Operation:
- Floor Mounted
- Portable
Breakup by End User:
- Casinos
- Malls
- Leisure Centers
- Others
Breakup by Region:
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- Japan
- India
- South Korea
- Australia
- Indonesia
- Others
- Europe
- Germany
- France
- United Kingdom
- Italy
- Spain
- Russia
- Others
- Latin America
- Brazil
- Mexico
- Others
- Middle East and Africa
Competitive Landscape:
The competitive landscape of the industry has also been examined along with the profiles of the key players being Abbiati Casino Equipment S.r.l., AGS LLC, Aristocrat Leisure Limited, Cammegh, Euro Games Technology OOD, Everi Holdings Inc., Incredible Technologies Inc., International Game Technology PLC, Jackpot Digital Inc., Konami Holdings Corporation, Novomatic, Scientific Games Corporation and TCS John Huxley Ltd. (Victoria Holdings Ltd.)
Key Questions Answered in This Report:
- How has the global casino gaming equipment market performed so far and how will it perform in the coming years?
- What has been the impact of COVID-19 on the global casino gaming equipment market?
- What are the key regional markets?
- What is the breakup of the market based on the product type?
- What is the breakup of the market based on the installation?
- What is the breakup of the market based on the mode of operation?
- What is the breakup of the market based on the end user?
- What are the various stages in the value chain of the industry?
- What are the key driving factors and challenges in the industry?
- What is the structure of the global casino gaming equipment market and who are the key players?
- What is the degree of competition in the industry?
Key Topics Covered:
1 Preface
2 Scope and Methodology
3 Executive Summary
4 Introduction
4.1 Overview
4.2 Key Industry Trends
5 Global Casino Gaming Equipment Market
5.1 Market Overview
5.2 Market Performance
5.3 Impact of COVID-19
5.4 Market Forecast
6 Market Breakup by Product Type
6.1 Slot Machines
6.1.1 Market Trends
6.1.2 Market Forecast
6.2 Video Lottery Terminal
6.2.1 Market Trends
6.2.2 Market Forecast
6.3 Video Poker Machines
6.3.1 Market Trends
6.3.2 Market Forecast
6.4 Others
6.4.1 Market Trends
6.4.2 Market Forecast
7 Market Breakup by Installation
7.1 Installed Inside Casino
7.1.1 Market Trends
7.1.2 Market Forecast
7.2 Installed Outside Casino
7.2.1 Market Trends
7.2.2 Market Forecast
8 Market Breakup by Mode of Operation
8.1 Floor Mounted
8.1.1 Market Trends
8.1.2 Market Forecast
8.2 Portable
8.2.1 Market Trends
8.2.2 Market Forecast
9 Market Breakup by End User
9.1 Casinos
9.1.1 Market Trends
9.1.2 Market Forecast
9.2 Malls
9.2.1 Market Trends
9.2.2 Market Forecast
9.3 Leisure Centers
9.3.1 Market Trends
9.3.2 Market Forecast
9.4 Others
9.4.1 Market Trends
9.4.2 Market Forecast
10 Market Breakup by Region
11 SWOT Analysis
12 Value Chain Analysis
13 Porters Five Forces Analysis
14 Price Analysis
15 Competitive Landscape
15.1 Market Structure
15.2 Key Players
15.3 Profiles of Key Players
15.3.1 Abbiati Casino Equipment S.r.l.
15.3.1.1 Company Overview
15.3.1.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.2 AGS LLC
15.3.2.1 Company Overview
15.3.2.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.3 Aristocrat Leisure Limited
15.3.3.1 Company Overview
15.3.3.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.3.3 Financials
15.3.3.4 SWOT Analysis
15.3.4 Cammegh
15.3.4.1 Company Overview
15.3.4.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.5 Euro Games Technology OOD
15.3.5.1 Company Overview
15.3.5.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.6 Everi Holdings Inc.
15.3.6.1 Company Overview
15.3.6.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.6.3 Financials
15.3.7 Incredible Technologies Inc.
15.3.7.1 Company Overview
15.3.7.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.8 International Game Technology PLC
15.3.8.1 Company Overview
15.3.8.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.8.3 Financials
15.3.9 Jackpot Digital Inc.
15.3.9.1 Company Overview
15.3.9.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.9.3 Financials
15.3.10 Konami Holdings Corporation
15.3.10.1 Company Overview
15.3.10.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.10.3 Financials
15.3.10.4 SWOT Analysis
15.3.11 Novomatic
15.3.11.1 Company Overview
15.3.11.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.12 Scientific Games Corporation
15.3.12.1 Company Overview
15.3.12.2 Product Portfolio
15.3.12.3 Financials
15.3.12.4 SWOT Analysis
15.3.13 TCS John Huxley Ltd. (Victoria Holdings Ltd.)
15.3.13.1 Company Overview
15.3.13.2 Product Portfolio
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CJEU
Malta faces new dawn as EU courts gather strength
With Bill 55 on increasingly shaky ground amid a transitional era for online gambling, what does the future hold for Malta’s point-of-supply industry?
This week has seen the EU heap yet more pressure on Bill 55, a defensive measure introduced by the Maltese government to hold back a tidal wave of player refund lawsuits that could cost the industry hundreds of millions of euros.
Players in Austria and Germany have been able to successfully argue in court that they should be repaid all money lost to operators that offered gambling in their countries without a local licence. The cases stand to erase years of grey market earnings at many operators.
Bill 55, which in June 2023 became an official amendment to the Malta Gaming Act under the title Article 56A, allows judges to reject court rulings from other EU nations if they threaten the economic security of the island’s gambling industry.
It has served Maltese operators well since it was enacted, effectively blocking lawyers from passporting claims from Austria, Germany and elsewhere to the location where operators are legally headquartered, in order to force them to pay out.
This has triggered an international legal wrestling match, now being fought via a series of cases at the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), the EU’s highest judicial authority.
So far, the judgements and opinions issued have not made comfortable reading for the Maltese industry or its regulatory officials.
Earlier this month, the court appeared to settle a longtime debate on which the entire premise of Malta as an offshore hub is founded. Judges said that the freedom to provide services within the EU does not allow for operators to ignore local prohibitions on certain types of gambling.
That was followed this week by an Advocate General (AG) advising judges that if they were to consider the legality of Bill 55, it should be struck down.
It also reaffirmed the court’s dim view of gambling as a cross-border service.
As the opinion put it: “Under the current state of EU law, Member States are under no obligation to recognise gambling licences issued by other Member States. Accordingly, a Maltese gaming licence is, in principle, valid only in Malta.”
This opinion is only advisory, and is unlikely to amount to anything in this particular case (C-683/24) because the AG also recommended that the case as a whole should be ruled inadmissible.
But this is just one in a handful of similar issues being considered by the CJEU and the more time that passes, the greater the pressure appears to be on Malta and Bill 55.
The EU is also taking a tandem approach: The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, has itself opened an investigation into Malta and the legality of Article 56A and has indicated through its own statements and submissions to the CJEU that it considers the provision to be against EU law.
New tactics needed?
All of which leads to several difficult questions for Malta and the many gambling companies based there.
The first is a defensive issue: With Bill 55 on the ropes, how will the nation prevent the many operators who call its islands home from being stuck with a huge refund charge?
Work is already underway to mount a new defense. The tactic uses the same inspiration as Article 56A, which argues that allowing the foreign court judgments that demand large payments from operators would seriously damage the Maltese economy and thereby upset its “public policy”.
The EU principle, also known as “ordre public”, allows for member states to make legal exceptions in order to protect their society.
In a pair of new cases addressing transferred player refund claims from Austria, Maltese lawyers have argued, without reference to Bill 55, that granting the payment orders would upset the nation’s public order.
These two cases are a clear attempt to establish that, even without any specific Gaming Act amendments, the principle of ordre public protects Maltese gambling firms from having to pay up.
The problem is, the CJEU may have seen this coming.
“The fact that the enforcement of certain judgments may entail serious economic consequences for a national operator, an industry or even the Member State addressed does not justify recourse to the ‘public policy’ clause,” reads the recent AG opinion.
Although lawyers in Malta insist that the AG’s comments should be taken only to refer to Bill 55.
Meanwhile, lawyers fighting to recover refunds believe that cases like these, which have already been appealed, will themselves wind up in the CJEU and at least buy more time for Malta before payouts need to be made.
A new kind of industry hub?
Perhaps the more fundamental question is what Malta offers as a gambling hub over the next decade.
It’s been apparent for some time that the value of a Maltese licence is degrading, through no fault of local authorities.
As European nations gradually switched on their own licensing models, operators have needed to collect local approvals.
Even where nations have clung firmly to monopolies, like in Norway, authorities have also become more effective in enforcing against offshore operators who offer into their territories.
The clear trend of the CJEU also indicates that arguments based on the freedom to provide services are practically finished.
In face of this reality, regulators and business leaders in Malta are looking further afield. Maltese law firms have appeared in locations as far afield as the UAE and Taiwan in recent years, as they look to advertise the nation’s status as a centre of iGaming excellence to emerging online gambling markets.
Leaning into the density of online gambling expertise is also an increasingly important strategy for those looking to attract investment to Malta.
The reason that the industry flocked to Malta in the first place may no longer be relevant, but it’s still the case that two decades later the nation boasts a greater concentration of industry talent than in any other European nation.
There’s also been an increased focus on suppliers, which typically have lower local compliance overheads and more ability to run their businesses remotely from the territories where their content is used.
Although this sector is increasingly subject to local licensing, as well as new compliance burdens designed by regulators looking to drive a wedge between on- and offshore online gambling markets.
Change is inevitable
Malta has demonstrated its ability to adapt and survive, but there’s little denying that the nation’s gambling industry has never been more under siege than it is now.
After decades of growth and success, new ideas are needed to steer the sector into a new phase.
The success with which it emerges from the Bill 55 era will have a dramatic impact on Europe’s online gambling sector and beyond.
The post Malta faces new dawn as EU courts gather strength appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
av advertising
BetVictor rolls out new brand campaign with biggest AV spend to date
BVGroup’s flagship brand BetVictor has launched a new brand campaign, “For All Your Favourite Things”, backed by what the company said is its largest AV investment to date.
The campaign, created by Barn Door Studios, uses a rewrite of “My Favourite Things” from The Sound of Music over visuals of sporting events. BetVictor said the creative focuses on “the uncomplicated thrill of sport and betting”.
BetVictor is timing the launch around this weekend’s Premier League schedule, with spots running alongside Arsenal vs Newcastle on Saturday evening and Chelsea vs Leeds on Sunday afternoon.
Media planning is led by Bountiful Cow. The plan includes a new partnership with Sky, spanning live sport integrations, on-demand, YouTube channels and targeted digital placements via Sky Advance. BetVictor also outlined a data-led SVOD and BVOD strategy across ITVX, Channel 4, Prime Video and Netflix, plus digital and social.
Richard Walters, Director of Brand and Creative at BetVictor, said:
“‘For All Your Favourite Things’ captures what BetVictor stands for today – a premium, straightforward experience that enhances the thrill of sport.
When done right, we believe that gambling is a simple pleasure; one that we love connecting our customers to. We wanted to celebrate the moments that matter most to sports fans.”
The post BetVictor rolls out new brand campaign with biggest AV spend to date appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Africa
QTech Games wins Leader in Online Casino at SBEA+ Eventus Awards 2026
QTech Games has won the Leader in Online Casino award at the Annual Sports Betting East Africa (SBEA+) 2026 Summit in Nairobi, Kenya.
The company said it beat other shortlisted suppliers including SA Gaming, BetConstruct, and DST Gaming. The award is described by the event as recognising the “top all-round online casino platform for innovation, user engagement, and sustained growth” over the past year.
The SBEA+ Eventus Awards focus on the East African igaming and sports betting sector and were presented at a gala ceremony at the Argyle Grand Hotel. QTech Games said the judging period covered 2025/26 and that its aggregation platform performance was ranked highest by the panel.
QTech Games CEO Philip Doftvik said: “We’re thrilled to have walked off with another notable award for the best overall online-casino-platform provision in East Africa. Being shortlisted in such good company was already a result, but victory provides the real validation, particularly after running a great campaign at recent Eventus events in Africa. We’ve been promoting QTech Hybrid, our breakthrough retail solution, to great effect and it’s been fantastic to see that going live with a handful of top-tier clients on this continent has led to such overwhelmingly positive feedback and immediate success cases in the realm of genuine innovation.
“This win is testimony to our diligent team at QTech Games, and to the constantly growing group of innovative suppliers that our platform represents. It’s a truly collaborative effort. We remain committed to rolling out high-quality content that drives revenue for our worldwide partners across Africa and beyond. After all, in today’s marketplace, only premium games of the highest standard will separate you from the crowd, so we were delighted to see the panel acknowledge how our premier platform is delivering across Africa’s eclectic ecosystem. We’ve made our name as the pre-eminent aggregator in these evolving margin markets, delivering localised games that speak to a host of player proclivities. This award win will spur us on to new horizons.”
The post QTech Games wins Leader in Online Casino at SBEA+ Eventus Awards 2026 appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
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