
By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.
In 2025-2026, the online gaming industry is rapidly evolving into a content-driven media ecosystem. Operators in the United States and Europe are redefining themselves as ‘media creators,’ not just gambling brands. They’re building original editorial content, community platforms, livestream experiences, and influencer-centric narratives to engage users more deeply and sustainably in a crowded market. This shift, what many industry leaders are calling “the great content migration,” is rewriting the competitive playbook and creating new opportunities for long-term growth.
From acquisition to engagement
Traditionally, iGaming marketing leaned heavily on performance tactics: search acquisition, high-bonus funnels, paid ads, and affiliate referrals. Today’s consumers, especially younger cohorts, are increasingly tuning out purely promotional messaging. Instead, they reward brands that inform, entertain, and build trust through consistent, valuable content. Recent industry research underscores this shift: operators are moving away from bonus-centric acquisition models toward brand-led ecosystems that prioritize reputation and long-term engagement.
In this context, iGaming is a storytelling and media opportunity. Users now expect:
- Expert content on strategy, odds and insights,
- Editorial narratives about sports, Esports and gaming culture,
- Interactive formats like podcasts, livestreams, and video shows, and
- Community-driven experiences beyond the core platform.
These formats help brands cut through noise and build deeper, high-LTV audiences rather than simply acquiring short-term sign-ups.
Media-like strategies driving real business value
Smart operators are already acting like media companies in ways that drive measurable ROI:
- Owned channels and editorial hubs
Brands are investing in blogs, podcasts, editorial newsletters, and content studios to build organic authority and SEO presence. Content becomes a traffic engine that feeds conversion while also shaping how audiences perceive the brand.
- Influencers and live content
Rather than generic affiliate referrals, operators are partnering with creators, streamers, and hosts to embed content directly into user experiences. Hybrid models where creators produce strategic content and drive sign-ups are emerging as a competitive advantage.
- Original formats and shows
Mirroring strategies in adjacent digital entertainment industries, some operators are experimenting with original video series, podcasts, and educational content aimed at deeper engagement and loyalty, not just promotions.
- Data-driven personalization
Content now drives the experience, powered by analytics that surface the right content at the right moment to individual users. This personalization builds emotional attachment and reduces churn.
Why is this migration happening now
Several forces are accelerating this trend:
- Audience Saturation and Cost of Acquisition: Global ad spending on digital acquisition for games and entertainment has exceeded USD 25 billion, illustrating how expensive and crowded traditional channels have become.
- Regulatory Complexity: As markets in the U.S. and Europe tighten advertising rules, branded content that educates or informs (rather than directly sells) is often a safer and more sustainable form of communication.
- Consumer Behavior: Users increasingly expect brands to be partners in experience, especially in areas like sports, Esports, live betting, and interactive entertainment.
- Competitive Dynamics: Operators that invest in content build brand equity faster than those reliant only on discounts and bonus funnels.
Examples of migration in practice
While European media giants and gaming platforms are not always publicizing the trend, we see companies investing in their media arms, editorial platforms and affiliate content networks, including integrated media divisions such as GiG Media spun out of Gaming Innovation Group.
Meanwhile, in adjacent markets like U.S. sports betting, operators such as DraftKings are incorporating media-style content curation and thematic channels into their product experiences, blending entertainment and gambling in Netflix-like formats.
What does this mean for operators and stakeholders
For B2B players, platforms, suppliers, affiliates and investors, the shift toward media-centric brands signals several strategic priorities:
- Invest in content infrastructure (studios, editorial teams, analytics), not just tech stacks.
- Diversify engagement touchpoints beyond the app: web content, video, influencers, community forums.
- Monitor compliance carefully as content intersects with regulation: education and entertainment are distinct from direct advertising.
- Measure content ROI holistically, not only by acquisition but by retention, LTV and audience loyalty.
The content migration in iGaming is a strategic evolution toward a richer, more sustainable digital economy where brands become centers of experience, culture, and connection. In an era where differentiation is harder to achieve through product alone, the ability to control narrative, to be the story, not just a service, is emerging as one of the industry’s most valuable assets.
As operators continue to blur the lines between gaming, entertainment and media, those that embrace content as a core product will be best positioned for long-term global growth in 2026 and beyond.







