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VSiN, The Sports Betting Network, Expands Podcast Network to Meet the Varied Interests of Today’s Sports Fans

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New Titles Help Fans Delve Deeper into Single Sport and Specific Betting Topics

LAS VEGAS, Oct. 09, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — VSiN, The Sports Betting Network, announces the expansion of its sports betting podcast network, bringing fans even more of the smart, entertaining sports betting content the network is known for. With new podcasts designed to meet the wide-ranging interests of today’s sports fans, VSiN is creating content that digs deeper into some of the themes and markets the network covers, while continuing to deliver the news, insights and analysis sports bettors need to make more informed wagering decisions.

“With demand for quality sports betting programming at an all-time high, we’re answering fans’ calls for more sports betting programming, covering even more markets and angles,” said Steve Cohen, EVP of talent and programming at VSiN. “Adding these new titles further secures VSiN’s position as the leading creator of sports betting content anywhere. Our continued commitment to actionable, credible, high-quality content sets us apart from the competition and fuels our growth.”

Podcasts launching in audio and video formats this fall, include:

  • VSiN just launched “Pod to the Futures,” a one-of-a-kind look at sports betting futures. Hosted by VSiN’s Mitch Moss and Jonathan Von Tobel this brand new concept will focus on the ever-changing season long odds and futures across all major leagues, teams and events.
  • Making its perennial return, VSiN’s “College Football Betting Podcast” brings fans the best college football betting insights out there. With three episodes out each week, VSiN’s Tim Murray and a revolving cast of experts analyze the latest odds, lines, picks, and predictions. This deep dive into the week’s matchups supplies the information needed to be the best college football bettor possible.
  • Recently relaunched, “First Strike,” takes a look at the week’s MMA, UFC and boxing betting action with experts Dave Ross and Rob Moreno. The First Strike team delivers sharp insights, bold predictions, and can’t-miss plays each Monday and Friday. The smartest UFC conversation anywhere, fans can tune in for a fast-paced breakdown of upcoming fight cards, betting angles, and insider takes for analysts and fellow bettors alike.
  • Hosted by VSiN analysts Patrick Meagher and Mike Somich, “Sharp Money” records immediately after the NFL action on Sunday and again Thursday afternoons to digest and analyze the action and outcomes of the day’s games and provide an early look ahead to the next week’s slate, offering predictions and best bets as they go.
  • While not a new podcast, “GM Shuffle” recently announced two new hosts. For the first time in its six year history, the popular podcast features both a former NFL executive and a former NFL player to deliver a one-of-a-kind insider perspective on all things pro football. Marty Hurney, who was GM at the Carolina Panthers, joins former NFL offensive guard, Geoff Schwartz. VSiN produces GM Shuffle for DraftKings Network.
  • The previously announced “Fade Us Sports” podcast brings together poker legends and sports insiders Phil Hellmuth, Mike “The Mouth” Matusow, Brandon Cantu, and David Woodley, as they apply their championship mindset to sports betting. With friendships and on and off again rivalries spanning more than 30 years, the group delivers unfiltered conversations and sharp perspectives, talking sports every day with a dynamic that is as authentic as it is entertaining. With 23 World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and more than $50 million in tournament winnings between them, it’s clear these guys don’t like to lose and have something to teach every gambler.
  • Coming next month, long-time VSiN host Pauly Howard will introduce the “Pauly Does Vegas” podcast to bring the network’s audience some of the best and most colorful stories Sin City has to offer. From early Vegas to today’s world, Pauly will offer stories that will leave you amazed and educated – including some of his own.

“Collectively, VSiN is the leading destination in podcasting for sports fans, reaching more than eight million people,” said David Krulewich, CEO of Mission Media. “With unmatched loyalty and scale, the VSiN Podcast Network gives advertisers the strongest path to influence. With these new, more targeted shows, brands can place messages exactly where they belong – seamlessly within the content fans trust – so they’re heard by the right listeners and converted into measurable results.”

Other titles within the VSiN Podcast Network, include VSiN Best Bets, Beating the Book, Long Shots, The Baseball Betting Show, VSiN at the Track, and others.

VSiN empowers sports fans and bettors with the news, analysis, and insights they need to make informed wagering decisions, with 24/7 coverage, including 18+ hours of live linear sports content each day. Featuring some of the industry’s most knowledgeable sports betting and fantasy experts, as well as legendary book makers, VSiN’s goal is to inform and entertain the growing number of Americans betting on sports – whether they are sharp bettors or brand new to sports betting. VSiN’s exclusive content sets the stage for the day’s biggest sports betting events and includes expert tips and predictions on college and pro football, college and pro basketball, baseball, hockey, golf, tennis, UFC, and more.

About VSiN
VSiN, The Sports Betting Network, is the first sports media company dedicated to providing news, analysis and proprietary data to the millions of Americans who wager on sports and make sports betting a multibillion-dollar industry. Fueled by award-winning broadcasters and legendary oddsmakers, the network informs and entertains consumers with the latest sports betting news and industry trends on multiple platforms. Fans can access VSiN content on YouTube TV, SiriusXM, FanDuel Sports Network, Rogers’ Sportsnet, NESN, Marquee Sports Network, MASN, Spectrum SportsNet LA, SportsNet Pittsburgh, iHeartRadio, TuneIn, more than 350 terrestrial radio stations throughout the U.S., VSiN.com, and VSiN.com/Podcasts.

VSiN’s newsroom studios are located in the sportsbooks at the Circa Resort and Casino in Las Vegas and Circa Sports at The Mint Gaming Hall Kentucky Downs in Franklin, KY.

Media Contact:
Michelle Musburger
773.230.0629
[email protected]

Advertising Contact:
David Krulewich
[email protected]

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Regulatory crossroads: Anti-match-fixing bill and betting tax rejection

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The Brazilian anti-match-fixing bill debate dominated headlines this week, exposing deeper political fault lines regarding how the betting sector fits into broader public policy priorities.

In a politically negotiated outcome in the Chamber of Deputies, lawmakers advanced the broader public security package while removing a proposed tax on betting operators, commonly referred to as “Cide-Bets.”

Originally introduced by the Senate, the Cide-Bets mechanism would have imposed a substantial additional levy — estimated at approximately R$30 billion annually — on sports betting revenues, earmarked to fund crime-fighting initiatives.

Its removal reflects a structural divide between public security ambitions and fiscal caution.

While there is political momentum to strengthen anti-crime legislation and integrity safeguards, there remains clear resistance to imposing heavier tax burdens on a newly regulated market that is still in a consolidation phase.

The outcome has generated contrasting interpretations.

Supporters of the original tax argued that a sector of this scale should contribute directly to public security funding.

Critics — including influential factions within the ‘Centrão’ — viewed the measure as disproportionate, warning it could constrain competition, reduce market attractiveness, and ultimately drive betting activity toward offshore or unlicensed operators.

For the industry, the message is nuanced. The regulatory pathway remains operational and politically viable; however, the fiscal dimension of betting regulation is far from settled.

Taxation is likely to reemerge as a central policy flashpoint as the 2026 electoral cycle approaches and public spending pressures intensify.

Player protection in the spotlight: Auto-exclusion and fraud dynamics

Beyond taxation, Brazil’s player protection architecture is facing heightened scrutiny — not due to regulatory absence, but because of operational friction and unintended behavioral responses.

Three months after the launch of the Federal Government’s Centralized Auto-Exclusion Platform — operational since December 10, 2025 — what was designed as a unified harm-mitigation mechanism is now encountering signs of opportunistic exploitation.

According to Ministry of Finance data, more than 217,000 auto-exclusion requests had been registered by early 2026, indicating substantial user engagement with the system.

However, licensed operators report an emerging pattern in which some bettors allegedly place high-risk wagers during the interval between submitting an exclusion request and the effective implementation of account blocking — a process that regulation allows to occur within 72 hours.

Once losses materialize, reimbursement claims are reportedly filed under the argument that access should have been suspended immediately upon registration.

Industry legal experts warn that this temporal gap is being instrumentalized as a form of regulatory arbitrage — effectively transforming a consumer protection tool into a reimbursement strategy.

The consequences include:

  • Financial losses for licensed operators
  • Increased complaints before consumer protection authorities (Procon)
  • Rising litigation under consumer law
  • Heightened legal and operational uncertainty

Gustavo Biglia, regulatory specialist at Ambiel Bonilha Belfiore Teixeira Hanna Advogados, has characterized the phenomenon as a case of moral hazard, in which a protection mechanism designed for vulnerable players is repurposed for opportunistic financial claims.

The broader structural issue lies in regulatory asymmetry.

The centralized platform applies exclusively to authorized operators integrated into Brazil’s regulated framework. Illegal offshore sites remain entirely unaffected.

As a result:

  • Licensed operators absorb integration costs, compliance exposure and reputational risk
  • Illegal operators continue operating without equivalent blocking obligations or enforcement pressure

This imbalance risks incentivizing migration toward unlicensed platforms — directly undermining the policy objective of channeling activity into supervised environments.

Additionally, Brazil’s regulatory framework granted a 90-day systemic adaptation period for operators to complete technical integration with the platform.

Yet reimbursement claims are reportedly being filed for transactions occurring within this transitional window, suggesting not regulatory failure, but deliberate exploitation of implementation timing.

The controversy illustrates a deeper tension:

Responsible gaming infrastructure is expanding rapidly — but without synchronized enforcement against illegal operators and real-time technical integration, well-intentioned tools can become vectors of friction and legal exposure.

The debate is no longer about whether Brazil has player protection mechanisms.

It is about whether those mechanisms are technically resilient, legally calibrated, and competitively balanced.

 SBC Summit Rio 2026: market maturity and operational reality

Amid these policy debates, the SBC Summit Rio 2026 — kicking off March 3–5 at Riocentro in Rio de Janeiro — is shaping up as the definitive industry convening of the year.

Unlike early editions, which were largely about signalling opportunity, this year’s summit is positioned as a platform for operational dialogue and practical problem-solving.

SBC and partners have explicitly tied the agenda to responsible gaming governance, operational challenges such as fraud control in fast payment systems like PIX, advertising compliance, and future policy scenarios.

A strategic partnership with the Brazilian Institute for Responsible Gaming (IBJR) reinforces this orientation — aligning responsible gaming advocacy with broader industry objectives and ensuring that player protection and illegal-market combat remain central discussion themes.

Hundreds of operators, suppliers and regulators will be on the ground.

International technology and platform providers such as InPlaySoft and AI innovation showcases like BetConstruct AI are already confirming their participation, signalling that technology, data and integration strategies will be critical threads in the conference conversation.

The event’s structure — spanning leadership, payments, affiliate strategy and networking zones — reflects a market transitioning from regulatory optimism to commercial realism.

Underlying market trends and the illegal market

While the regulated sector builds infrastructure and dialogue, the illegal market remains a spectre, with enforcement efforts still evolving.

Brazil has previously invested in technological frameworks — such as cyber labs and coordinated agency action — to block unauthorized betting sites and tighten compliance networks.

That said, fraud and illegitimate operations continue to distort perceptions of safety and efficacy, and may in some cases cushion demand for offshore platforms, where rapid onboarding and lax safeguards attract certain segments of bettors.

The tension here is clear: enforcement and protection structures must outpace the fluidity of unauthorized operators, or risk ceding market share and player trust.

What this means going forward

This week’s congofluence of events — legislative flux, protection debates and a major global industry summit — presents a snapshot of a maturing but still unsettled market:

  • Politically, Brazil’s regulators and legislators are protective of the regulatory framework but cautious about overtaxation and unintended market effects.
  • Operationally, tools like auto-exclusion and identity protection are under pressure, revealing gaps in how safety mechanisms interact with fraud and player behaviour.
  • Strategically, SBC Summit Rio offers a rare moment for stakeholders to align on practical priorities, from governance to AI-driven infrastructure, and to set a shared agenda for 2026.

In essence, Brazil’s betting market isn’t just growing — it is being stress-tested in real time, and how stakeholders respond in the coming months will shape not just revenue trajectories but the legitimacy and resilience of the entire ecosystem.

The honeymoon phase is over.

The consolidation phase has begun.

And how operators, regulators and political actors respond in the coming months will determine whether Brazil becomes a model of regulated scale — or a case study in premature acceleration.

Brazil’s Ministry of Sport publishes eSports guide

Alongside debates over taxation, integrity, and player protection, Brazil’s Ministry of Sport has formally elevated eSports within the national policy framework through the release of its new institutional guide on electronic sports.

While the document is educational in tone, its political significance should not be underestimated.

By defining eSports within an official public policy context, the government is signaling regulatory recognition and long-term sectoral legitimacy.

This matters for three reasons.

First, it reinforces the convergence between competitive gaming and regulated betting markets.

As Brazil’s sports betting ecosystem matures, eSports betting represents a structurally attractive vertical: digitally native audiences, high engagement frequency, and cross-platform monetization potential.

A clearer institutional framing reduces legal ambiguity and strengthens the case for structured oversight rather than prohibitionist reflexes.

Second, the move positions the Ministry of Sport — and particularly the Secretariat of Sports Betting and Economic Development — as an active architect of emerging digital sports verticals.

This suggests that eSports may gradually become embedded in discussions around integrity monitoring, match-fixing prevention, and betting market supervision, especially as anti-match-fixing legislation advances.

Third, the guide contributes to narrative rebalancing.

At a moment when betting debates are often framed through taxation disputes and fraud controversies, formal recognition of eSports highlights the innovation and economic development dimension of the broader gaming ecosystem.

In strategic terms, the publication does not immediately alter market mechanics.

However, it strengthens the institutional scaffolding around a sector that is likely to become increasingly relevant for operators, regulators, and investors alike — particularly as Brazil prepares for further regulatory refinements ahead of the 2026 electoral cycle.

The post Regulatory crossroads: Anti-match-fixing bill and betting tax rejection appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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Brazil enters the post-legalisation tightening phase

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Between 14 and 19 February, a sequence of developments in Brazil signalled something more significant than regulatory routine.

The country has entered the same post-legalisation political cycle already observed across mature European gambling jurisdictions — the social impact phase.

After market opening comes expansion.
After expansion comes scrutiny.

Courts, Congress and federal regulators are now acting simultaneously around a shared concern: exposure and harm mitigation.

For operators and investors, this stage historically reshapes business models more than taxation or licensing ever did.

Italy (2018), Spain (2020), the Netherlands (2022) and the UK affordability debate all followed this pattern roughly 12–36 months after market regulation.

Brazil has reached it faster due to scale, media visibility and political salience.

Courts move first: responsible gambling becomes interface architecture

The most immediate operational impact came from the judiciary.

A state court in Goiás ordered 251 licensed operators to prominently display addiction-risk warnings before bet placement.

The mandatory message references anxiety, depression and over-indebtedness, effectively transforming responsible gambling messaging from compliance disclosure into a functional UX barrier.

This matters beyond the state itself.

Brazil’s gambling framework is federal, but consumer protection enforcement is state-driven. Public prosecutors frequently replicate precedents across jurisdictions, meaning obligations can propagate faster through litigation than through regulation.

For operators, this introduces a new risk category: conversion liability.

Any mechanism designed to reduce impulsive betting inherently affects conversion metrics.
The business model must therefore reconcile behavioural friction with revenue optimisation.

This mirrors developments seen in European markets where interface design — not licensing — became the primary regulatory battleground.

Congress targets advertising — and therefore channelisation

While courts addressed player protection, the Senate advanced legislation restricting betting advertising across television, radio, press, social media, sponsorships and promotional campaigns, with penalties including multimillion-dollar fines and potential licence consequences.

In gambling regulation, taxation rarely determines operator viability.

Visibility does.

Brazil’s regulatory logic depends on channelisation: migrating consumers from offshore operators to licensed platforms.

Channelisation requires awareness, and awareness requires marketing.

The economic implications are predictable:

  • rising customer acquisition cost (CAC)
  • shrinking affiliate ecosystems
  • weaker brand differentiation
  • improved competitiveness of illegal operators

This dynamic has precedent.

Following Italy’s Decreto Dignità advertising ban, affiliate activity collapsed and offshore presence strengthened.

Spain experienced similar effects among younger demographics after Royal Decree 958/2020.

Brazil now faces the same structural tension:
public policy seeks reduced exposure, while regulated markets require controlled visibility to function.

Sports financing becomes political leverage

The advertising debate has introduced a secondary policy argument: sports funding.

Industry executives warn that reduced marketing capacity and constrained odds competitiveness may lower betting volume and therefore tax transfers and sponsorship revenue to sports organisations.

This represents a narrative reversal.

During legalisation debates, betting was justified as a mechanism to finance sport.
Now sport is used as an argument against over-restriction.

The political discussion has shifted from fiscal optimism to economic trade-offs — a transition typical of markets moving from expansion to stabilisation. 

Federal government confirms long-term supervision

The Ministry of Finance, through the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting, published its 2026–2027 regulatory agenda prioritising:

  • revision of licensing criteria
  • lottery operational rules
  • enforcement and monitoring procedures
  • payment blocking mechanisms
  • responsible gambling tools
  • oversight of influencers and affiliates

The conceptual shift is crucial.

Brazil is moving from regulating operators to regulating ecosystems.

Further, platforms, media partners, marketing agencies, affiliates and payment channels become enforcement targets.

This marks the transition from market creation to market supervision — a defining milestone in regulatory maturity.

Competition increases as commercial freedom narrows

At the same moment regulation tightens, the number of licensed operators exceeds roughly 180 platforms.

This produces a classic newly regulated market paradox:

More competitors entering precisely when commercial flexibility declines.

The usual outcome is consolidation.

Smaller operators depend on aggressive acquisition strategies and bonus-driven growth, both incompatible with advertising limits and rising compliance costs.

Larger operators with brand equity and media partnerships absorb market share.

Growth therefore continues — but viability narrows.

Narrative shift: from revenue opportunity to social risk

The most important change is rhetorical rather than legal.

Legalisation was framed around taxation, formalisation and sports funding.
Current public discourse focuses on addiction, indebtedness and youth exposure.

Public policy follows perception cycles:

Phase Dominant framing Regulatory behaviour
Opening Economic opportunity Expansion
Stabilisation Consumer protection Restriction
Maturity Harm minimisation Behavioural control

Basically, Brazilian institutions now align around the second stage.
Courts emphasise mental health, legislators visibility, regulators supervision.

Such alignment historically precedes durable regulatory tightening rather than temporary intervention.

What this means for international stakeholders

Brazil remains one of the largest global betting opportunities.
However, the operating logic is changing.

The market is transitioning from:

  • acquisition-driven growth → retention-driven growth
  • marketing scale → brand legitimacy
  • speed → compliance resilience

International operators often interpret this phase as instability.
Historically, it signals maturation.

Across Europe, long-term profitability emerged only after this stage forced operators to adapt operational discipline, customer lifetime value strategies and media partnerships.

Conclusion: legitimacy replaces entry as the main barrier

The developments of mid-February did not introduce a single transformative rule.
They created institutional convergence.

Judiciary, legislature and executive authorities are reacting to the same concern: the social footprint of betting.

The first phase of Brazil’s regulated market determined who could enter.
The second will determine how they may operate.

The industry is no longer negotiating access.
It is negotiating legitimacy.

And in regulated gambling markets, legitimacy — more than licensing — ultimately defines sustainable profitability.

Betnacional launches culturally-driven communication platform in Brazil

Additionally, Betnacional has unveiled a new communication platform called “Bota essa paixão pra jogo” (“Put that passion into play”), aimed at strengthening brand relevance and engagement among Brazilian sports fans during a period of heightened global football attention.

Developed in partnership with creative agency Galeria.ag, the platform is built around a cultural understanding of how Brazilian fans experience sport — characterized by emotional intensity, active participation and a uniquely expressive approach to cheering.

The campaign is designed to run through the first half of 2026.

Alvaro Garcia, Chief Marketing Officer of Flutter Brazil, explained that the strategy deliberately taps into football’s deep cultural presence in Brazil, noting that nearly half of the population watches at least one match per week — a statistic that underscores the sport’s daily relevance.

According to internal Betnacional research, 60% of sports bettors place bets three or more times per week, with that figure rising to 69% among users who combine sports wagering with other betting formats. These behavioural insights helped guide the creative direction of the campaign.

The initiative includes multi-channel activations across TV, digital platforms and out-of-home (OOH) formats, with short creative pieces designed to resonate both in traditional media and social environments.

The campaign’s creative approach reflects Brazil’s football culture, often blending humor with emotional storytelling to portray fan passion as a natural extension of everyday life.

According to Ricardo Schreier, Head of Brand Creative & Insights at Flutter Brazil, the platform serves as a “fertile territory for building narratives” that creatively translate cultural behaviour into consistent brand expression.

This campaign also marks the first major work of Galeria.ag in its role as lead agency for both Betnacional and Betfair in Brazil — a position the agency assumed at the end of 2025 as part of Flutter Brazil’s integrated strategy combining planning, market intelligence and creative execution

The post Brazil enters the post-legalisation tightening phase appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

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Top Sports Events & Promos by N1 Partners: Where to Drive Tier-1 Traffic in February

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February presents one of the strongest seasonal windows for affiliates working with Tier-1 sports traffic — and N1 Partners is expanding the opportunities even further.

The affiliate program has strengthened its sports offering by making betting available across three brands: the flagship N1 Bet, alongside RollXO and Lucky Hunter. This multi-brand setup allows partners to scale sports traffic strategically while leveraging casino brands with proven conversion performance.

Instead of relying on a single product, affiliates can now diversify traffic flows, stabilize KPIs, and combine sports, casino, and seasonal promotional mechanics for stronger long-term results.

Why February Is a Prime Month for Sports Traffic

Conversion stability often depends on timing. Campaigns aligned with seasonal peaks, major sporting events, and emotionally engaging dates consistently outperform generic traffic launches.

February stands out due to:

  • A packed schedule of top European football leagues and international tournaments

  • The Winter Olympic Games

  • Valentine’s Day seasonal campaigns

  • Increased emotional engagement and deposit intent

During high-profile events and holiday periods, users are more likely to deposit, participate in promotions, and return to the platform. The right contextual hook can directly influence conversion rate, average deposit size, and retention.

To help affiliates capitalize on this momentum, N1 Partners has prepared a focused list of key February sports events and active promotional mechanics.

Key Sports Events in February 2026

11 February

  • Coppa Italia Quarter-final: Bologna vs Lazio

  • Olympic Ice Hockey: Slovakia vs Finland

  • Premier League: Manchester City vs Fulham

  • DFB Pokal Quarter-final: Bayern Munich vs RB Leipzig

  • NBA: Houston Rockets vs LA Clippers

  • Copa Libertadores Qualification Quarter-finals (2nd legs)

12 February

  • Olympic Ice Hockey: Czech Republic vs Canada

  • Premier League: Brentford vs Arsenal

  • NBA: Orlando Magic vs Milwaukee Bucks

  • EuroLeague Regular Season (Round 28)

  • Rugby Super League (England & France)

13 February

  • Olympic Ice Hockey: Canada vs Switzerland

  • NBA: Oklahoma City Thunder vs Milwaukee Bucks

  • German Handball Bundesliga

14 February (Valentine’s Day Peak)

  • Olympic Ice Hockey: USA vs Denmark

  • FA Cup Round of 16

  • Bundesliga: Werder Bremen vs Bayern Munich

  • France Top 14 Rugby

  • Liga ASOBAL (Spain)

  • Liga ACB (Spain)

15 February

  • Olympic Ice Hockey: Switzerland vs Czech Republic

  • Serie A: Inter vs Juventus

  • Serie A: Napoli vs Roma

  • Serie A: Lazio vs Atalanta

  • LaLiga: Girona vs Barcelona

  • LaLiga: Real Madrid vs Real Sociedad

  • Ligue 1: Marseille vs Strasbourg

  • Ligue 1: Rennes vs PSG

  • NBA All-Star

  • WTA 1000 Dubai – Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships

This density of premium events creates multiple testing angles for creatives, pre-landers, and geo-targeted funnels.

Valentine’s Day Promotions Across N1 Partners Brands

To enhance conversion rates during peak emotional engagement, N1 Partners is launching seasonal campaigns across key brands.

Valentine’s Advent Calendar (N1 Bet & RollXO)

Period: 13–17 February

Five days of engagement mechanics:

  • 13.02 – Love Box: prize up to €15,000

  • 14.02 – Valentine’s Riddle Offer: 100% bonus up to €500 + 150 FS

  • 15.02 – Sunday Challenge: 50% bonus on the 3rd deposit

  • 16.02 – Road to Free Spins: 30 FS for every €350

  • 17.02 – Fortune Lottery Series: €63,000 prize pool

Cupid Mailbox Lottery (Lucky Hunter)

Period: 9–14 February

  • 28 winners

  • Grand prizes include a trip to Paris

  • €6,400 + 1,400 Free Spins prize pool

These mechanics integrate smoothly into sports-driven funnels and allow affiliates to increase average deposit value and session frequency.

Why This Strategy Works for Tier-1 Affiliates

Seasonal and event-driven campaigns help partners:

  • Increase average deposit size

  • Improve LTV through repeat engagement

  • Offset typical mid-quarter CR slowdowns

  • Enhance emotional appeal through contextual offers

  • Diversify revenue streams across sports and casino

In competitive Tier-1 markets, product-driven campaigns and structured promotions help stabilize performance and make scaling more predictable.

What Affiliates Should Do Now

February combines major football clashes, Olympic hype, NBA spotlight events, and Valentine’s promotions into one high-conversion window.

Now is the time to:

  • Drive sports traffic to top European leagues and Olympic matchups

  • Integrate Valentine’s promotions into creatives

  • Split-test traffic between N1 Bet, RollXO, and Lucky Hunter

  • Use seasonal hooks to strengthen CTR and deposit intent

The N1 Partners team provides updated promotional materials, analytics support, and personalized optimization guidance tailored to traffic volumes.

About N1 Partners

N1 Partners is a multi-brand affiliate platform and direct advertiser uniting 14+ casino and betting brands across Tier-1 GEOs.

Key highlights:

  • Reg2Dep rates up to 70%

  • CPA up to €700

  • RevShare up to 45%

  • 14,000+ active partners

  • Dedicated affiliate management and long-term performance focus

More than just an affiliate program, N1 Partners delivers a performance-driven ecosystem designed to help affiliates scale sustainably in competitive markets.

The post Top Sports Events & Promos by N1 Partners: Where to Drive Tier-1 Traffic in February appeared first on Eastern European Gaming | Global iGaming & Tech Intelligence Hub.

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