iGaming
Supremeland Welcomes iGaming Veteran Staffan Lindgren to Board Of Directors
Supremeland Gaming, Inc., the emerging brand in American iGaming, is pleased to announce Staffan Lindgren’s appointment to its Board of Directors.
Lindgren brings over 20 years of experience and a wealth of expertise in iGaming, notably as co-founder of NYX Interactive (later NYX Gaming Group), a major player in the iGaming industry. He has also held numerous previous board positions in both public and private companies in the iGaming sector and is poised to have a material impact on Supremeland’s strategic vision and growth plans.
“We are thrilled to welcome Staffan to our Board,” said Johan Apel, Executive Chairman at Supremeland Gaming. “He will undoubtedly strengthen our board and provide invaluable insights as we continue to innovate and expand in the rapidly evolving US iGaming market.”
Lindgren joins Supremeland at an exciting time. The company continues to experience rapid growth with the announcement of four US license approvals and the release of multiple iGaming titles in New Jersey and Michigan. The team also took home the “Slot Debut” award at the 2024 CasinoBeats Game Developer Awards. The winning title, Munition Mine
, is the debut title from Powderkeg Studios, a Supremeland Gaming Studio.
Lindgren expressed his enthusiasm for his new role, stating, “I am honored to join the esteemed board of Supremeland Gaming and look forward to collaborating with the talented and innovative team to drive the company’s success to new heights. I am eager to help Supremeland navigate and capitalize on the fantastic opportunity that lies ahead in the US iGaming market.”
Apple
Brazil’s regulated betting market faces its most turbulent week since launch
From App Store access to police budget disputes, four developments this week reshaped the regulatory and commercial landscape for licensed operators in Brazil
One in ten Brazilian teenagers bet on licensed platforms in 2025
A study commissioned by identity verification platform Unico and conducted by Ipsos with 1,200 young Brazilians between the ages of 10 and 17 revealed that 11% of that population placed bets on betting platforms during 2025.
The highest concentration occurred in the final four months of the year, when 9% of respondents reported having wagered. The data was first reported by Estadão.
The numbers are concentrated in the older age groups and among male respondents. Among boys aged 16 and 17, 20% said they had placed bets online at some point.
Among girls aged 14 and 15, the figure was 14%, more than three times the rate recorded among girls aged 10 to 13, where 4% reported accessing betting platforms or games such as “tigrinho.”
The findings are significant not because they point to failures in the regulated market, but because they highlight what lies beyond it.
Brazil’s licensed operators have been required since January 2025 to implement real-time facial recognition as part of their Know Your Customer procedures, making it virtually impossible for anyone under 18 to register on an authorised platform.
Pix transactions are restricted to accounts matching the platform registration, closing off the use of parents’ credentials.
Operators found in breach face fines of up to R$2 billion and licence revocation.
Luis Felipe Monteiro, CEO for Latin America at Unico, identified the core vulnerability.
“The main challenge today is that much of the internet still operates under fragile age verification mechanisms, based only on self-declaration.
In practice, clicking a button saying ‘I am over 18’ is enough to access different types of content or services,” he says.
Curiosity was the primary reason cited by young respondents for placing bets, mentioned by 41%.
The prospect of easy money was cited by 34%, while the influence of content creators registered at just 9% , a figure that complicates the prevailing narrative around influencer-driven gambling among minors.
The regulatory framework is tightening further.
Brazil’s Digital Child and Adolescent Statute, in force since March 17, requires digital platforms to implement mechanisms to prevent excessive or compulsive use among young people, a provision that explicitly covers betting and digital gaming.

Apple opens the App Store to licensed betting operators in Brazil
In a development the industry had been pushing for since the regulated market launched, Apple updated its App Store policies on May 8 to allow the distribution of fixed-odds betting applications in Brazil.
The change applies exclusively to operators holding a valid licence issued by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting of the Ministry of Finance.
The move ends a period in which the iOS ecosystem maintained stricter restrictions for betting apps in the Brazilian market than in comparable regulated markets in Europe.
Those limitations had pushed licensed operators to prioritise mobile web versions and Progressive Web Apps over native applications, a structural disadvantage in a market where smartphones are the primary access point for bettors.
For operators seeking to list their applications, Apple has established a specific review process. Submitting updated app information in App Store Connect without uploading a new version will not trigger a review.
Developers must include Brazilian licence details in the App Review Information section, insert the information in the Notes field and attach supporting documentation confirming operational authorisation.
Applications classified as gambling content must carry an 18+ age rating in Brazil, applied automatically when developers confirm gambling content in the age rating questionnaire.
Apple’s guidelines state that applications must comply with all disclosure and notice requirements under Brazilian law, including age restrictions and gambling risk warnings.
Developers are directed to consult legal counsel on their specific obligations.
The industry’s reading of the update is clear: it represents international recognition of Brazil’s regulatory framework by one of the world’s largest technology companies.
The practical implications extend across commercial strategy.
Mobile already accounts for the dominant share of user access in Brazil, and the availability of native iOS applications opens new possibilities for conversion optimisation, user retention, CRM strategies and push notification campaigns, tools that web-based solutions cannot fully replicate.
The update brings Brazil closer to the operating conditions of established regulated markets in Europe, where licensed operators have long distributed native applications through official mobile ecosystems without restriction.
The full update is available on the Apple Developer News portal.
Brazil’s betting regulator takes the national experience to Bogotá
Daniele Cardoso, Secretary of Prizes and Betting at Brazil’s Ministry of Finance, represented the country at the 10th Ibero-American Gaming Summit, which concluded on May 6 in Bogotá, Colombia.
The event, held under the theme “Latin America: a regulated market driving opportunities,” brought together authorities and representatives from 15 Ibero-American countries alongside global companies and industry associations.
The host institution was Coljuegos, the Colombian gaming regulator linked to the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit.
Cardoso participated in the panel “Regulation and Licensing in Latin America: the stability framework,” where she outlined the trajectory of Brazil’s regulatory process and the challenges of building a framework for a market already in full operation at the time the rules were being written.
She traced the legal foundation from Law 13.756/2018 through to Law 14.790/2023, which established the fixed-odds betting regulatory regime, defining the rules for market entry and permanence, the sanctions process, consumer protection measures and mechanisms to address the negative externalities of the activity.
“Participating in international meetings allows us to learn from the experiences of other countries, exchange good practices and improve legal and technological regulatory tools,” Cardoso said.
“This contributes to a safer, more transparent and better protected environment for the bettor.”
The panel also included:
- Luis Filipe Coelho, director of the Gaming Regulation and Inspection Service of Portugal;
- José Luis Pérez, director of Regulation and Registration at Peru’s General Directorate of Casino Games and Slot Machines;
- Juan Carlos Santaella Marchán, director of Puerto Rico’s Gaming Commission;
- Maria de Lourdes Ramírez, General Director of Games and Lotteries of Mexico;
- Marco Emilio Hincapié, president of Coljuegos.
A second panel, focused on responsible gambling as a long-term business sustainability driver, addressed consumer protection as a central pillar of industry operations, with emphasis on the implementation of policies and tools capable of ensuring the viability of the business model while prioritising client protection.
Brazil’s presence in Bogotá reflects the growing weight the country carries in regional regulatory conversations.
With one of the most comprehensive licensing frameworks in Latin America now in its second year of operation, Brazilian regulators are increasingly sought as reference points by counterparts across the region.
Police forces dispute control of betting tax revenues as provisional measure creates internal friction
A provisional measure signed by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in early April has generated significant tension within Brazil’s federal security forces over the distribution of revenues derived from fixed-odds betting taxation.
The measure directs up to R$200 million to the Fund for Equipment and Operationalisation of the Federal Police’s Core Activities, known by its Portuguese acronym Funapol, with the stated objective of covering health benefits for officers across three federal police forces: the Federal Police, the Federal Highway Police and the Federal Penitentiary Police.
The political framing presented the measure as a shared victory for all three forces.
The legal reality is more complicated. Funapol is structurally and exclusively linked to the Federal Police.
The provisional measure contains no legal guarantee that the funds will be distributed proportionally among the three institutions, a gap that has generated sustained concern within the Federal Highway Police and Federal Penitentiary Police, according to CNN Brasil.
The background to the measure matters.
The government had originally pursued a Constitutional Public Security Fund as the vehicle for this funding, but that project stalled in Congress with insufficient time for approval before electoral legislation restrictions came into force.
The provisional measure , which carries immediate legal force, was the alternative solution. It resolved the bureaucratic obstacle without resolving the underlying dispute over distribution.
The model established by the measure provides for the government to transfer, progressively through 2028, up to 3% of total fixed-odds betting tax revenues to Funapol.
With Brazil’s regulated market recording a GGR of R$37 billion in 2025, the potential scale of those transfers is substantial.
Congressional allies of the Federal Highway Police and Federal Penitentiary Police have responded by introducing amendments seeking to broaden the scope of distribution and prevent the Federal Police from being the sole beneficiary.
The dispute has transformed the measure’s passage through Congress into a legislative battleground, with both forces maintaining active lobbying operations in Brasília to secure equal treatment.
For the betting industry, the episode illustrates a dynamic that has become increasingly visible since the market launched: tax revenues from licensed operators are now large enough to attract political competition over their allocation, a development that underlines both the scale the regulated market has reached and the institutional complexity of managing it.
The post Brazil’s regulated betting market faces its most turbulent week since launch appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
affiliate marketing
ReferOn completes management buyout as Alex Bukin becomes CEO
ReferOn has completed a management buyout, with former General Manager Alex Bukin acquiring the iGaming affiliate management platform and taking over as Chief Executive Officer.
Bukin said the deal is intended to support longer-term product and market plans: “This is an important moment for ReferOn and the beginning of a new chapter for the business. The management buyout provides us with the long-term focus required to continually advance the platform. We remain committed to product development, strengthening our offerings for partners, and supporting ReferOn’s continued growth across key markets.”
ReferOn reported that in its first 12 months post-launch it recorded 35.7 million clicks, 2.4 million registrations, 18,000 affiliates, and 136,000 active trackers. The company also said it was named “Best Affiliate Platform” in 2025 and 2026 by industry stakeholders.
The company said the ownership change will not affect day-to-day operations and that existing support and partnerships will continue. It also pointed to recent product updates including Refie, described as a built-in interface layer, alongside features such as dynamic reporting, Company Grouping, Sub-Affiliation, Independent Deal Calculation (IDC), two-factor authentication (2FA), and mobile optimization.
As part of the transition, ReferOn said its leadership team remains in place, with Vlad Bondarenko moving from Head of Product to Chief Product Officer and David Harris moving from Operations Lead to Chief Operations Officer.
The post ReferOn completes management buyout as Alex Bukin becomes CEO appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
ELA Games
ELA Games’ Joker Winpot shortlisted for Game of the Year at SBC Awards Americas
ELA Games said its slot title Joker Winpot has been shortlisted for “Game of the Year” at the 2026 SBC Awards Americas, with winners set to be revealed on June 10, 2026 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
The company described Joker Winpot as a consistent performer in its portfolio, combining a dark, character-driven theme with a 1×1 grid format.
ELA Games said the title’s core differentiator is its proprietary Winpot mechanic, a progression-based feature built around player choice. As rewards build inside the Winpot, players can either cash out or keep spinning in pursuit of higher payouts.
The 2026 SBC Awards Americas ceremony will take place at the Broward County Convention Center. Organizers expect around 600 industry professionals, with the awards running alongside SBC Summit Americas from June 9–11.
The post ELA Games’ Joker Winpot shortlisted for Game of the Year at SBC Awards Americas appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
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