Malta-based NetGaming, a casino games studio, has signed a deal with software solutions provider BetConstruct, that will make its immersive slot portfolio available to BetConstruct’s operators.
This content will include recent superheroes-themed slot Infinity Battle.
NetGaming will also benefit from the BetConstruct Spring Platform, a content distribution tool.
Pallavi Deshmukh, CEO at NetGaming, stated, “We are thrilled to partner with BetConstruct in a move that is sure to strengthen our customer base.”
Aida Harutyunyan, product owner of BetConstruct’s Casino, added: “We happily welcome NetGaming to our family of gaming content providers. The innovation and diversity of their portfolio will see wider success among our partner operators and their players.”
This Dossier results from the “Life After POGOs” editorial project by Asia Gaming Brief which culminated with a pop-up digital forum on 9th December to discuss potentials ramifications in the industry.
Covid-19 forced the rapid and unexpected closure of venues across Australia, changing the operating environment with unprecedented speed and leaving managers scrambling to adapt...
Hyatt Hotels Corporation has announced the opening of the 1,600-room Grand Hyatt Jeju in South Korea, the largest Hyatt hotel in Asia Pacific. This hotel is part of the Jeju Dream Tower which opened on Friday.
Galaxy Entertainment Group told Macau News Agency that recent wage dispute involving workers employed at its Cotai expansion projects, originated from fee disputes between the workers and mainland employment agencies.
MGM Resorts has thrown its cards into the online gaming ring, with an attempt to buy U.K.-listed Entertain for GBP11.3 billion ($15.4 billion), which may reshape the group and reduce its focus on Asia in the longer term.
Over the years, many of the answers have been remarkably prescient in their forecasts for the near-term direction of Asia’s gaming industry. However, we can safely say that no one came anywhere close to guessing
what 2020 may have had in store.
While nowhere in the world has escaped the economic fallout from the Covid-19 crisis, Macau has been hit harder than most, with forecasts for gross domestic product to shrink more than 50 percent this year.
Before the Covid-19 crisis, tourism in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region was at a record high, on track to welcome 80 million visitors in 2019, generating some $90 billion in revenue.