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Week 32/2020 slot games releases
Here are this weeks latest slots releases!
CT Gaming Interactive launches a new online game with fascinating cascading mechanics that will keep the players entertained for longer. Dark Woods is a cascading reels slot that will add excitement and dynamism to the experience. As players want more action and entertainment, including everything from detailed animations to in-depth features, Dark Woods is very appealing to this action-craving audience. The 30 pay-line game has Scatter which could appear on all reels. The winning symbols disappear only to be replaced with falling new symbols and it is going on for as long as there is a winning combination. The bet is taken only for the initial game and all subsequent cascade games are free for the player.
Amid scorching summer days and electric storms Tom Horn Gaming comes with a special treat for its players – a revamped version of its highly popular game 243 Crystal Fruits. In 243 Crystal Fruits Reversed the provider completely flips the old fruit video slot upside down and reverses mechanics of the original game, making the player experience a whole lot different. Not only does the game reverse original features, it comes in with amazingly tweaked visuals that complement the thrilling gameplay that is again sure to keep every ardent player on the edge of their seats right from the moment of hitting the Spin button.
Relax Gaming, is inviting players to a Spanish celebration brimming with winning potential in its latest release La Fiesta. The 5×4 slot is the supplier’s most feature-rich game to date, combining four unique Free Spins festivals, bonus round buy-ins and randomly activated mechanics to create a high-volatility gaming experience that replicates the excitement of a real-life fiesta. Triggered when three scatter symbols land on the reels, each of the Rose, Tomato, Bull and Stallion Free Spins rounds present players with the opportunity to claim engagement-enhancing prizes ranging from minigames and mega stacks to free spins and multipliers.
Pragmatic Play, has added Aztec Gems Deluxe to its growing line of deluxe titles. The 3×3, fast-paced video slot adds a modern twist on a classic jewel-filled title with its fixed jackpots which are accessed through the Respin feature. If four Money Symbols land on the reels at the same time, the Respin round is triggered. This sees the Money Symbols remain sticky as players aim to fill the entire grid with matching symbols to win a bonus prize or a random multiplier, picked via a wheel spin.
This week Booming Games introduced it’s layest slot, Howling Wolves. This medium volatility 5×3 slot brings you deep into the native American environment, populated by one of the most important animals in their culture. For native Americans, the wolf represents courage, strength and loyalty. Some of their cultures even believe these majestic creatures to be a part of the family, also believing that members of their clan can take on the appearance and attributes of a wolf.
Yggdrasil, has released Medusa Fortune and Glory, its latest YG Masters game in partnership with DreamTech Gaming. The 4×6, 4096 payline title transports players to the wonders of Ancient Greece as they battle mythological creatures for huge wins. If a Medusa wild lands on the screen, it has the potential to spread to other reels, adding up to three extra wilds per spin. The Free Games Feature is triggered if three or more Bonus symbols land in the same spin, giving players a choice between a Fortune Feature or Glory Feature round.
Play’n GO are bringing some real attitude to the reels as they announce their latest slot offering, Blinged. A spiritual successor to their 2015 slot Pimped, this latest title is based around the world of rap, specifically female artists. Women take centre stage in this 5×3 video slot, as players attempt to make it to the top and bag the riches. The game is a reflection of some modern cultural themes with the rise in popularity of artists like Cardi B, Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion cementing women’s place at the forefront of music in recent times.
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Sports Betting, E-cigarettes and the Illusion of Prohibition
The debate over banning online betting in Brazil is resurfacing at a sensitive moment in the public discourse, marked by simplistic solutions to complex issues.
In this article, Thiago Iusim, founder and CEO of Betshield Responsible Gaming, analyzes the parallels between the electronic cigarette market and the ‘Bets’ sector, highlighting how attempts to eliminate an activity by decree tend to push it into informality.
According to him, the Brazilian experience shows that prohibition does not eliminate markets — it merely reduces the State’s ability to control them and increases risks for consumers.
Brazil has seen this movie before.
There is a magic solution that always seems to return to public debate, especially in election season, whenever an issue becomes politically inconvenient: ban it.
The logic is seductive. In the political narrative, the issue disappears. In real life, it simply moves elsewhere.
E-cigarettes make that point painfully clear.
Vapes have never been authorized in Brazil. They have been officially banned since 2009. In theory, they should not exist. In practice, they are everywhere, sold through social media, messaging apps, marketplaces, street vendors, and small retail shops, with no sanitary controls, no effective oversight, and no real guarantee of origin.
Prohibition did not eliminate the market.
It only eliminated the possibility of surrounding that market with rules.
A recent CNN report on the surge in e-cigarette seizures helps show the scale of the problem. Brazil did not get rid of vapes. It simply pushed the market into an environment where the state lost the capacity to control it.
The state banned it. Organized crime applauded.
That experience helps explain the current debate around online betting in Brazil.
Bets existed long before Law 14,790/2023. For years, Brazil lived with an active market operating online and from abroad, with no local tax collection, no regulatory oversight, and no effective consumer protection tools.
The activity did not emerge because of the law. The law emerged because the activity already existed.
Regulation was the rational response. It was the way to bring an already existing market into a controllable framework, with licenses, concession fees, user identification, anti-money laundering requirements, advertising rules, and player protection mechanisms.
And yet, just eighteen months later, public debate is once again flirting with the same simplistic solution applied to vapes: the fantasy that prohibition would make the activity disappear.
By now, Brazil should know better.
In the case of betting, the country had chosen a different path: regulate in order to control. Protect consumers. Protect the broader economy.
To now return to prohibition as a response to a market that already exists would be more than a regulatory mistake.
It would be a historical contradiction.
Or perhaps simply the most comfortable expression of a certain kind of public moralism that would rather push an activity into the shadows than acknowledge its existence.
In political discourse, prohibition can sound like victory.
In practice, it often functions as morally comfortable packaging for rushed and politically convenient decisions.
This is nothing more than electoral fantasy. And this time, no one will be able to say they did not know how the story would end.
Thiago Iusim
Founder and CEO of Betshield Responsible Gaming
The post Sports Betting, E-cigarettes and the Illusion of Prohibition appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Bichara e Motta Advogados
Los nuevos desafíos de la industria del iGaming en 2026
The post Los nuevos desafíos de la industria del iGaming en 2026 appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Bichara e Motta Advogados
The iGaming Industry’s New Challenges in 2026
In an exclusive article for Gaming Americas, Udo Seckelmann, partner in the Gambling & Crypto department at Bichara e Motta Advogados, examines how the Brazilian iGaming market has entered a new phase of maturity following BiS SiGMA South America 2026.
Moving beyond regulatory expectations, the industry now faces real operational, political, and economic pressures, raising critical questions about sustainability, enforcement, and the balance between growth and consumer protection in one of the world’s most dynamic betting markets.
BIS SIGMA 2026 made it clear that the conversation around Brazil’s betting sector has fundamentally changed. The industry is no longer being discussed as a future opportunity shaped by regulatory expectations, but as a functioning ecosystem already subject to real-world pressures. With the framework in force and operators active, the focus has shifted to how the market actually behaves under regulation — and where that framework is being put to the test.
This shift was evident both in the quality of the discussions and in the profile of participants. In past editions, much of the debate focused on the ideal regulatory framework, taxation, and market entry strategies. In 2026, the focus moved toward more sophisticated — and, in many ways, more challenging — topics: regulatory implementation, enforcement, and the balance between growth and consumer protection.
An additional element that permeated many discussions was the recent hardening of political discourse toward the sector. Statements from the President suggesting the potential elimination of the regulated betting market, as well as initiatives in Congress aimed at broadly restricting betting advertising, reveal legitimate concerns about negative externalities but also a concrete risk of public policy being shaped in a way that is disconnected from the newly established regulatory reality.
The criticism here is not directed at the concern for consumer protection — which is undoubtedly essential — but rather at how this debate has been conducted. Prohibitive or overly restrictive measures, particularly in the field of advertising, tend to produce adverse effects already observed in other jurisdictions: reduced channeling capacity toward the regulated market, the strengthening of illegal operators, and a weakening of consumer protection mechanisms themselves.
In this context, advertising should not be viewed solely as a risk factor, but also as a public policy tool. It is through advertising that licensed operators can differentiate themselves from unregulated entities, communicate responsible gambling practices, and operate within auditable parameters. Disproportionate restrictions, in practice, reduce the visibility of those subject to regulation while simultaneously expanding the space for those operating outside it.
Moreover, the instability of political discourse — especially when it flirts with prohibition scenarios after years of efforts to structure a regulated market — creates significant legal uncertainty. Investments made based on a recent regulatory framework are reassessed, compliance costs increase, and the appetite of new entrants tends to decline. Ultimately, this undermines not only the development of the sector but also government revenue and the original regulatory objectives pursued by the Government.
Another key topic discussed during the event was the impact of increased taxation — particularly following the rise in the Gaming Tax — on the competitiveness of the regulated market. There is a legitimate concern that an overly burdensome environment, combined with severe advertising restrictions, may create an economically unviable scenario for licensed operators, once again encouraging migration to the unregulated market.
Another highlight of the event was the debate surrounding the role of technological intermediaries — including market makers in emerging segments such as prediction markets. The expansion of these models raises important regulatory questions: to what extent are existing frameworks sufficient to accommodate these innovations? And when will it be necessary to move toward specific regulatory regimes, potentially under the oversight of authorities such as the securities regulator?
A comparison with previous BIS SIGMA editions clearly demonstrates the sector’s growing maturity. If Brazil was once seen as a major promise, it is now a complex reality that requires fine-tuning and institutional coordination. The agenda has shifted from market opening to governance — now under much more intense political and social scrutiny.
Finally, one aspect that deserves particular attention is the increasing professionalization of all stakeholders involved. Operators, regulators, service providers, and even the broader public debate have evolved significantly. There is now a clearer understanding that the success of the Brazilian market depends on its credibility and long-term sustainability.
Udo Seckelmann
Partner in the Gambling & Crypto department at Bichara e Motta Advogados
The post The iGaming Industry’s New Challenges in 2026 appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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