
Two of the iGaming industry’s largest suppliers, Evolution and Pragmatic Play, have ceased offering their content on the sweepstakes casino platform Stake.us within California.
The move comes as a direct response to a civil enforcement action filed by the City of Los Angeles, which targets the operator and its providers for alleged illegal gambling activities.
This high-profile withdrawal underscores a significant shift in regulatory strategy, placing game suppliers at the center of enforcement efforts against grey market operations.
The lawsuit initiated by Los Angeles names not only Stake.us but also several prominent game studios, including Evolution-owned brands such as Nolimit City®, Red Tiger, Big Time Gaming, and NetEnt, alongside Pragmatic Play.
The legal action alleges that the sweepstakes model constitutes unlawful gambling under state law. The suppliers’ decision to exit the market is further compounded by the advancement of California’s Assembly Bill 831.
This proposed legislation, which is moving toward a full Senate vote, seeks to establish criminal penalties for any business found to be supporting the operations of illegal sweepstakes casinos, intensifying the risk for B2B providers.
Industry experts suggest that this development signals a broader trend where regulators are increasingly targeting game suppliers as the key enforcement point within the iGaming ecosystem.
By holding providers accountable for where their content is distributed, authorities can exert significant leverage over operators in unregulated or grey markets.
For suppliers such as Evolution and Pragmatic Play, particularly those active in licensed US jurisdictions, this strategic shift makes robust compliance frameworks and proactive reputational risk management more critical than ever to avoid legal and financial repercussions.