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Blueprint Gaming gets its groove on in Funky Pharaoh Jackpot King
Blueprint Gaming has added to its list of memorable game characters with the introduction of Funky Pharaoh Jackpot King, grooving his way across the reels to guide players toward big wins.
Following in the footsteps of the developer’s collection of firm player favourites such as the mighty Kong, the all-powerful Genie and its iconic fisherman, the Funky Pharaoh brings a fun and vibrant twist to the popular Egyptian game genre.
The entertainment takes place over five brightly coloured reels and offers 10 win lines on which traditional symbols such as treasure chests, scarab beetles and ankhs must be matched.
Any fully stacked Funky Pharaoh Wild symbol that lands in view triggers the Funky Wild Respins during which the shade-wearing Pharaoh steps one position to the left on each respin – the multiplier increasing each time.
Blueprint’s recently introduced Spin Boost option makes another appearance (available on £5 stakes only) sees any win of £5 or higher offer the chance to trigger the Win Spins bonus.
The action is also primed to be elevated at any point with one of three progressive jackpots from the industry-leading Jackpot King system, which continues to add a regal touch to Blueprint’s games.
Jo Purvis, Director of Key Accounts and Marketing at Blueprint Gaming, said: “The Funky Pharaoh has arrived and Egyptian-themed games have never been so much fun – or so cool!
“Our Jackpot King progressive pots are back again to enhance the funky gameplay and hopefully help lucky players throw some shapes with huge wins!”
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Compliance Updates
MGA Representative Appointed Co-Chair of GREF InfoStat Working Group
Erika Spiteri Bailey, the Senior Executive of Business Intelligence & Data Analytics at the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA), has been officially appointed as the Co-Chair of the InfoStat Working Group within the Gambling Regulators European Forum (GREF).
Erika Spiteri Bailey will serve in this role alongside Anssi Airas, representing the National Police Board of Finland.
GREF is a forum for European gaming regulators, facilitating the exchange of views and the development of approaches to common regulatory challenges. Within this framework, the InfoStat Working Group provides a platform for regulators to collaborate and exchange insights on the use of data in support of effective policy development and decision‑making across jurisdictions.
In her role as Co-Chair, Erika Spiteri Bailey will contribute to shaping the group’s work programme and fostering cooperation among members, with a focus on strengthening data‑driven regulatory approaches.
The post MGA Representative Appointed Co-Chair of GREF InfoStat Working Group appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Chris Thornton
GamCare Appoints Chris Thornton as its New Director of Operations
GamCare has announced the appointment of Chris Thornton as its new Director of Operations, with overall responsibility for the delivery and performance of GamCare’s national and regional services, including the National Gambling Helpline. Chris joins the Executive Leadership Team at a pivotal time for the gambling support sector.
Chris brings extensive senior leadership experience spanning the NHS, voluntary sector and health commissioning. He joins GamCare from the British Red Cross, where as Director for the North of England and Isle of Man he led multi-disciplinary health and care operations, managing around 100 staff and £3m in annual income from NHS and local authority commissioned services, delivering measurable reductions in emergency department attendance, hospital readmissions and reliance on formal social care.
Chris has built and led services at scale throughout his career. At Primary Care Sheffield he led city-wide clinical services and co-led successful bids worth £22m. At St John Ambulance he created the East Midlands region and grew its charitable output by 365% while reducing costs by 61%. He is a Chartered Companion of the Chartered Management Institute and served for eight years on the Nursing and Midwifery Council’s Fitness to Practise Committee.
Chris Thornton, incoming Director of Operations at GamCare, said: “I’m thrilled to join GamCare at such an important moment for the organisation and for everyone working to reduce gambling harms across the UK. GamCare operates at national scale, running the UK’s only round-the-clock specialist support service for gambling harms, combining the National Gambling Helpline, live chat, online communities and self-guided tools with thousands of structured treatment sessions and prevention and education programmes reaching tens of thousands of people each year.
“That combination of specialist expertise, integrated delivery and frontline impact is rare in any sector, and is shaping how effective support for gambling harms is understood and delivered. I’m looking forward to building on those foundations and to playing my part in ensuring GamCare’s services continue to meet growing demand as the sector evolves.”
Victoria Corbishley, CEO of GamCare, said: “I’m delighted to welcome Chris to GamCare and to the Executive Leadership Team. He brings exactly the combination of strategic and operational leadership that reflects how we work, significant experience of leading complex health and community services at scale, a strong track record of evidencing impact, and a deep commitment to reaching people who are often underserved. I look forward to working closely with him as we continue to deliver and develop our national services.”
The post GamCare Appoints Chris Thornton as its New Director of Operations appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.
Conor Durnin Co-Founder of The Unit
iGaming has a product quality problem and the earnings calls are starting to show it
By Conor Durnin, Co-Founder of The Unit
For years, the iGaming and sports betting industries have been able to deprioritise product innovation by turning their focus to aggressive customer acquisition spend and market growth. As long as new market opportunities have arisen and promotional activity has remained effective, operators have typically seen strong topline growth with this approach.
A look at some of the most recent earnings calls, however, suggests that the cracks are starting to appear in this model. Many global operators have become aware of this, with shareholder reactions prompting a return to a more customer-centric approach.
In their Q1 2026 earnings update, Flutter acknowledged that FanDuel had a smaller customer base than expected at the end of last year. Their CEO Peter Jackson publicly stated that the business needed to “go back to basics” to counter its issues with retention. Recently, the company reduced full-year EBITDA guidance from approximately $3.3bn to $2.9bn, while broader reporting pointed toward growing pressure around leadership and performance expectations.
If the dominant player in the U.S. market is openly discussing retention challenges, it suggests the industry is dealing with something much larger than a temporary dip.
Of course, marketing spend can drive downloads, registrations, and first deposits, but it doesn’t compensate for a product experience that fails to retain customers. FanDuel’s marketing succeeded in bringing users through the door, but they have admitted a need to cater to changing customer behaviour. Its post-earnings “improvement plan” focuses on functionality and features, and a product-based strategy.
With plenty of choice at their fingertips, modern betting customers can be unforgiving. If onboarding feels clunky, they leave. If live betting experiences feel slow or unintuitive, they don’t stick around. If same-game parlays are frustrating to build, they’re out.
The challenge for operators is that these UX and UI deficiencies can remain a hidden threat until it’s too late. During periods of market expansion, acquisition spend can cover up poor retention metrics and weak customer experiences. But eventually, markets mature, promotional efficiency declines, acquisition costs rise, and shareholders start demanding sustained profitability, rather than growth. At that point, as FanDuel has demonstrated, product quality becomes one of the primary commercial drivers for success.
Furthermore, the emergence and resilience of prediction markets increase the pressure on operators to focus on product quality. For years, the US sports betting market was heavily protected by state-by-state licensing. If an operator secured market access, invested heavily in acquisition, and established early brand recognition in newly regulated states, they were relatively insulated from competition. The barriers to entry were primarily regulatory and financial, rather than product-led.
Prediction markets, which are only bound by national CFTC regulation, threaten to disrupt that dynamic. While the regulatory position is still evolving, prediction markets are able to scale nationally far more quickly than traditional operators were able to in the post-PASPA expansion era. Hence, we’re seeing the likes of DraftKings make a significant push into the category (albeit one that is weighted towards marketing spend, rather than product).
Many of the traditional advantages sportsbooks once relied upon, including licensing barriers, first-mover advantages, and enormous acquisition spend, are becoming less impactful. In a market with lower structural barriers and more consumer choice, product experience becomes even more important. Simply put, more than ever, operators need to build products that customers genuinely prefer to use.
One of the biggest misconceptions in the industry is that operators do not understand where customer expectations are heading. In reality, most are run by very talented people who are keenly aware of the importance of better live betting experiences, smarter personalisation, stronger engagement mechanics, and more seamless user journeys.
The issue tends to be execution capacity. Internal product and engineering teams are often overwhelmed by maintaining existing systems, supporting market launches, handling integrations, and meeting regulatory obligations. That leaves very little room to innovate and create the projects that can be true difference makers.
Naturally, there’s no shortage of product investment among operators, but they may lack the capacity and dynamism to execute meaningful innovation fast enough to keep pace with the kind of changing customer expectations and behaviours that FanDuel recently referenced.
In mature markets, execution speed is a competitive advantage in itself. At The Unit, we partner with operators across regulated markets who are aware of the opportunities of quality product, but who need to outsource to achieve the capability and bandwidth required to execute quickly enough.
That may involve launching new betting products ahead of a major tournament, improving same-game parlay experiences before a new season, scaling frontend capability across multiple jurisdictions, or modernising legacy systems without disrupting existing operations.
FanDuel have been astute enough to recognise that ongoing success isn’t contingent on spend to fuel acquisition, preferring instead to focus on identifying customer behaviours faster, and retain customers more effectively.
The operators that build the infrastructure, partnerships, and delivery models needed to execute quickly, will create sustainable long-term advantages. The rest may learn that while marketing can bring customers through the door, only product quality convinces them to stay.
The post iGaming has a product quality problem and the earnings calls are starting to show it appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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