Latest News
Showcasing GR8 Casino: A Proven Asset Now a Standalone Product

Following the recent market rollout of the GR8 Sportsbook, an iGaming solutions provider GR8 Tech introduces another standalone product now available to the wider iGaming industry: GR8 Casino.
Just like GR8 Sportsbook, GR8 Casino is a tried and tested platform that has proven its operational efficiency in many markets over several years. Confident in their ability to provide a signature high level of service and unlock the potential of GR8 Casino to more customers, GR8 Tech is launching the casino platform as a standalone product within their portfolio of technologies and services.
“GR8 Casino is a robust and future-oriented product that can elevate the game for any operator in the iGaming industry. It has proven track record of results, great feedback, rich capabilities, and a huge potential for growth. You may know good casino platforms, but ours is simply gr8, and we encourage operators to check out what it can offer to their iGaming businesses,” says GR8 Tech CEO Evgen Belousov.
GR8 Casino: tech capabilities
GR8 Casino handles up to 20K requests per second with a latency of 1 transaction within 200 ms for each operator. Best-in-class processing speed ensures an average spin time of just 120 ms.
The product supports fast provider integration, averaging around one week, and offers a unique “bring-your-own API” feature for seamless integration.
GR8 Casino: feature highlights
The Jackpot Widget integrates real-time jackpot updates displayed in the player’s currency, contributing to a +5% increase in ABCPU, a +3% rise in games per user, and a +6% boost in ATPU.
The Latest Wins Feed is fully configurable and features dynamic, real-time updates. Displaying only real wins, this feed enhances trust and spurs a +4% increase in bet count per user and a +3% increase in average turnover.
The Hall of Fame introduces a competitive element, especially enticing to VIPs and high-rollers. This feature is responsible for a +4% improvement in retention rate, a +3% increase in average bet, and a +2% growth in average turnover.
These are just a few of the standout features designed to optimize player engagement and operational performance. Complementing them are advanced content verification and robust anti-fraud monitoring systems that ensure a secure gaming environment for both operators and players.
GR8 Casino: bonus engine mechanics
GR8 Casino’s Bonus Engine offers an unparalleled level of customization across different gambling verticals, including live casino and slots. Players can simultaneously take advantage of multiple bonus types, as the wallet maintains separate balances for live casino deposit bonuses, slot bonuses, and more. This flexible system features an array of rewards, including deposit bonuses, free spins, free bets, and cashback. It’s designed to be easily adjusted to align with brand-specific strategies and requirements.
Further bolstering the system’s integrity are rigorous anti-fraud checks, along with measures to detect debt and duplication issues. This ensures a secure and reliable bonus ecosystem.
In terms of performance impact, the Bonus Engine delivers a 75-80% month-to-month increase in player retention. Furthermore, the enhanced retention capabilities result in increased LTV and ARPPU, contributing to a substantial 45% increase in Net Gaming Revenue.
GR8 Aggregator: game portfolio
With over 10,000 slots, 350+ live casino games and tables, 350+ bingo games, and 60+ TV games, sourced from more than 175 vendors, including all AAA-providers like Evolution, Playtech, and Pragmatic Play, players have an abundance of choices. For iGaming brands in regions such as Latin America and Asia, there’s a curated selection of popular games from 30+ specialized providers. A number of games in GR8 Casino’s portfolio seamlessly integrate Live Casino gameplay with sports betting outcomes, making it ideal for cross-selling opportunities between sports and casino verticals, which expands the possibilities of the casino business.
GR8 Casino also features games from GR8 Tech’s in-house game provider, FiredUp Games. 11 titles currently in the FiredUp Games’ portfolio introduce players to nine distinct game mechanics, which provide a dynamic gaming experience full of excitement and novelty at every turn.
GR8 Casino at SBC Barcelona
The earliest opportunity to get an in-depth look at GR8 Casino, its features and capabilities will be on September 19-21 at SBC Barcelona, where GR8 Tech will be exhibiting at stand CG414. Anyone interested in the new online casino platform, as well as other GR8 Tech products and solutions at the booth, is invited to book a meeting with the company’s sales team.
Latest News
Podium’s Racing Data to Power Dabble’s Social-led Betting Service in the UK

Podium, a leading global provider of trusted sports content and data solutions, is working with Dabble to help bring its socially driven betting experience to UK audiences.
Dabble combines traditional betting functionality with a social media-style interface to offer the next generation of racing fans a more interactive way to connect and share. The app-based platform is integrated with Betmakers technology, with all UK horse and greyhound racing data delivered by Podium.
Ian Houghton, Commercial Director at Podium says: “At Podium, we are always excited when we see innovation in the industry, so we are delighted to play a part of Dabble’s expansion into the UK market, particularly at a time when the racing industry needs to retain a younger audience. We look forward to exploring how Podium’s services can continue to support Dabble’s global ambitions.”
The collaboration, which has been in place since the summer, marks an evolution in how racing data is used and experienced, with Podium delivering UK racing content via Betmakers technology to help power Dabble’s social platform.
Tom Rundle, CEO of Dabble, says: “Dabble’s move into the UK is a natural fit. We’re a challenger brand with an exciting product that we built ourselves from scratch. We’re already seeing that resonate with the UK audience. Yes, you can get a bet on, but essentially, we are placing ourselves as being community driven. We’re creating a richer experience at every touch point.”
The UK is Dabble’s third international market, following rapid growth after launching in its native Australia.
The post Podium’s Racing Data to Power Dabble’s Social-led Betting Service in the UK appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
Campus Gambling
College Partnerships Under Scrutiny: The Future of Campus Gambling Deals – Compliance, Alternatives, PR Risk

The era of splashy sportsbook logos wrapped around student sections is fading fast, and for good reason. What looked like an easy revenue win after the expansion of legal sports betting now sits at the intersection of compliance complexities, reputational hazards, and evolving cultural expectations about how gambling interacts with college life. Universities are recalibrating their risk tolerance, athletic departments are revisiting sponsorship inventories, and operators are rethinking whether campus-facing marketing is worth the blowback. At Gambling Freedom Casino and News Portal, we’ve seen the conversation shift from “How big can this get?” to “How do we do this responsibly,or not at all?” The answer is not a simple yes or no; it’s a recognition that the future of campus gambling deals will be smaller, more carefully segmented, and anchored in integrity and harm minimization. That future rewards institutions and brands that can communicate clearly, document compliance rigorously, and operate with a “help-first, hype-later” mindset.
From a compliance standpoint, the baseline in 2025 is tighter than many casual observers realize. Industry marketing standards increasingly discourage promotions that could be perceived as targeting students, and the phraseology once common in acquisition campaigns is now off-limits or strongly discouraged. In parallel, more state regulators are scrutinizing college markets, especially player-specific proposition bets, on the grounds that they heighten the risk of harassment and integrity issues. The NCAA has spent the last few seasons pushing for stronger athlete protections and a more consistent compliance posture across jurisdictions. Put all of that together and the practical effect is clear: even if a category is technically legal in one state, the patchwork of rules, guidance, and best practices makes campus-facing deals a compliance headache and a reputational gamble. The safest route is to build partnerships that avoid student channels, exclude conversion-driven creative around college events, and lean into education, integrity, and alumni engagement where age gating and segmentation are both meaningful and auditable.
Reputational risk is the other half of the equation and it’s often underestimated until it isn’t. The optics of a sportsbook brand appearing inside a campus venue or in an email blast that lands in student inboxes can overshadow months of careful planning. In the digital age, a single misguided subject line or banner placement can live forever in screenshots, resurfacing whenever a university confronts unrelated controversies. For athletic departments, the blowback doesn’t just come from national media; local stakeholders, faculty governance, and alumni donors have strong opinions about how a school’s brand is used. The narrative can turn quickly: what a marketing team frames as “supporting athletics” can be framed by critics as “monetizing student attention with gambling.” Add the human dimension—students and athletes facing social media pressure tied to bets and the reputational calculus tilts further away from broad-based campus advertising. Once a school becomes the example cited in op-eds and parent forums, every future sponsorship meeting starts on defense, which is a tremendous tax on leadership attention and goodwill.
So where does that leave universities and sportsbooks that still want to collaborate responsibly? The first lane is alumni-only engagement that lives firmly outside student media. Think association newsletters sent to verified recipients, event activations tied to homecoming for over-21 alumni, and gated digital experiences where age verification and alumni status are both required. The operative phrase is segmentation with proof: CRM hygiene that suppresses any .edu domains associated with enrolled students, third-party age checks that withstand audit, and creative that emphasizes responsible play rather than acquisition gimmicks. It is equally important to leave campus-owned assets out of the plan entirely: no student newspaper, no student radio, no in-venue signage within sightlines dominated by under-21 attendees, and no .edu pages. Success here is measured by quiet compliance, not splashy vanity metrics. Campaign briefs should spell out what will not be done (no first-bet language, no odds boosts tied to school IP, no promo codes keyed to team names), and media buys should be geofenced and frequency-capped to avoid spillover impressions.
The second lane is integrity and data cooperation, which is fundamentally different from marketing. Rather than converting users, these partnerships focus on protecting competitions and people. Universities and operators can align around standardized reporting protocols for suspicious activity, training modules for staff and athletes that explain wagering rules and red flags, and secure data exchanges that support real-time anomaly detection. When structured correctly, integrity agreements do not place sportsbook logos on campus; they establish clear lines of responsibility, define escalation paths if something looks off, and include audit rights to ensure both sides are living up to the agreement. Forward-thinking athletic departments are building dashboards that track integrity KRIs (key risk indicators) across seasons, and operators are assigning compliance liaisons who can respond quickly to questions about markets, limits, and emerging risks. A valuable signal of sincerity is a proactive stance on contentious markets: choosing not to market college player props or removing them from any alumni-facing creative, sends a message that athlete wellbeing matters more than marginal handle.
A third lane is responsible-gambling (RG) education and independent research, an area where universities can lead with credibility if the funding and governance are set up correctly. The rule of thumb is “help, not hype.” Programming should elevate helplines and support resources, teach students and staff how to recognize early warning signs, and outline practical steps for friends or teammates who are worried about someone’s gambling. Workshops can be built for specific audiences, athletes, coaches, RAs, student leaders – with content tailored to situations they’ll likely encounter, like managing group chats during big games or dealing with harassment tied to a missed free throw. If an operator helps fund this work, the branding should be deliberately muted and the calls to action should point to counseling resources, not betting apps. On the research side, schools can host longitudinal studies on gambling behaviors and mental health that inform policy decisions across states. The key is independence: academic freedom, publication rights, and data privacy are non-negotiable. When these programs release annual reports with outcomes numbers trained, referrals made, satisfaction and knowledge retention scores, they earn trust with regulators and the public.
Embedding all of the above in real governance requires contracts and processes that are as rigorous as anything in broadcast rights or apparel. Agreements should explicitly exclude student-facing channels and campus IP in promotional contexts, require preclearance of all creative, and mandate third-party age and identity checks for any alumni lists used in marketing. Internal workflows matter just as much: establish a cross-functional signoff path that includes compliance, legal, athletics communications, the alumni office, and student affairs; maintain a living registry of all placements; and document every exception request and rejection. A quarterly audit, conducted by an independent partner, should test suppression lists, confirm geo and age parameters, and sample creatives for prohibited phrasing. Crisis preparedness is part of the job: have templates ready for misdirected emails, rogue social posts, and policy changes that force offer adjustments mid-season. Run tabletop exercises with leaders so everyone knows who approves the statement, who pauses the media, who contacts the vendor, and who answers reporter questions. The smoothest crises are the ones that never become public because the response is instant and well-rehearsed.
Looking ahead, the most realistic forecast is a smaller, safer lane for college–operator collaboration. Expect states and conferences to continue refining rules around bet types and advertising, particularly where athlete wellbeing and harassment are implicated. Expect universities to sunset remaining campus-facing placements in favor of alumni-only channels that leave a clean paper trail, lowering both compliance risk and noise around brand stewardship. Expect the integrity conversation to mature, with more standardized data formats, quicker reciprocity on investigations, and better education for the non-athlete campus community, resident advisors, counseling centers, and compliance staff who are often the first to notice when something is off. And expect that schools which articulate a clear philosophy- “We protect students, we protect athletes, we promote help-seeking, and we partner only where age-gated, auditable outcomes exist”, will spend less time in reactive posture and more time telling a positive story about values.
For operators, the business case is quiet credibility. Instead of chasing a fleeting burst of signups tied to a rivalry game, smart brands will invest in long-term reputation: integrity agreements that make competitions safer, alumni engagements that demonstrate real respect for age limits and context, and RG programs that exist to serve the community rather than acquire customers. That approach doesn’t just avoid headlines, it earns allies. Alumni who see careful, adult-only engagement are less likely to bristle at a brand’s presence. Regulators who see documented controls and public reporting are less likely to question motives. University leaders who see proof of restraint are more open to renewing low-risk collaborations. In other words, the playbook that Gambling Freedom recommends is not “do nothing,” but “do the right things, in the right places, for the right reasons.”
The final takeaway is simple: campus gambling deals are no longer a volume game; they are a values game. If your plan cannot be explained in a sentence that starts with student safety, athlete wellbeing, and competition integrity, it’s probably the wrong plan. If your KPIs are built around alumni engagement quality, RG outcomes, and zero incidents—not just clicks and codes, you’re on the right track. And if your processes assume that everything might one day be scrutinized by parents, faculty, alumni, and policymakers, you will build the sort of resilient partnership that can survive news cycles and leadership changes. Gambling Freedom exists to help universities and sportsbooks navigate precisely this terrain, compliance-conscious, PR-smart, and responsibility-first – so that whoever partners on college sports can do so with confidence, clarity, and respect for the communities they serve.
The post College Partnerships Under Scrutiny: The Future of Campus Gambling Deals – Compliance, Alternatives, PR Risk appeared first on Gaming and Gambling Industry in the Americas.
Conferences in Europe
Endorphina Goes Viral With Baywatch-inspired SBC Lisbon Posters

The leading slot game provider, Endorphina, continues to make waves in the iGaming industry, announcing its presence at the highly anticipated SBC Lisbon with a big splash. From September 16-18, Endorphina’s stand, number B590, will bring the ultimate beach escape at the Feira Internacional de Lisboa & Meo Arena.
To further tease its presence at the upcoming beach-themed booth at SBC Summit Lisbon, Endorphina created a campaign inspired by the popular TV show Baywatch. The company organized a special photoshoot with its employees dressed as lifeguards patrolling the beaches of Lisbon. In addition, Endorphina designed special posters that play with the aesthetics of 80s and 90s posters and VHS tapes.
This announcement from Endorphina immediately captured the attention of the iGaming world, with the posts receiving 5x more engagement than usual on LinkedIn. The photoshoot featured employees from various departments, including Kirill Miroshnichenko, CCO; Irina Veselkova, Marketing Strategy Coordinator; Dejan Vranjanin, Head of Account Development; Mihail Cojocaru, Team Lead Client Success Management; Marie Eliseeva, Account Manager; and Svetlana MD Masud, Partnership Manager.
This campaign teases Endorphina’s booth at SBC Summit Lisbon, which will be themed to bring the ultimate beach paradise straight to Portugal. The company promises unique activities and a memorable experience for visitors, inviting them to visit booth B590, meet the Endorphina team, and immerse themselves in the beach-themed atmosphere.
The post Endorphina Goes Viral With Baywatch-inspired SBC Lisbon Posters appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
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