In The News: International Center for Gaming Regulation

The prediction platform that takes bets on everything from who will win the Stanley Cup to when Taylor Swift will tie the knot is joining forces with the National Council on Problem Gambling, which seeks to minimize the effects and prevalence of gambling addiction.
Sands Corp. faces competition from Chickasaw, Choctaw and others. That鈥檚 if lawmakers expand casino gaming in Texas.
The Tigua of El Paso, the Kickapoo and the Alabama-Coushatta battled the state for their right to be sovereign and self-sufficient.
During the 2025 legislative session, heated debate in Austin illustrated how politically savvy one Texas Native American tribe had become.

Electronic pull tabs 鈥 the digital, more dynamic evolution of their paper predecessors 鈥 are giving charities a low-cost, low-maintenance way to modernize revenue without overhauling their entire operation.
Arguments against DEI are now being employed to threaten Indian gaming
Is a 鈥減rediction market鈥 a gambling platform or an investment vehicle? That鈥檚 the question dividing state regulators from the Trump Administration, which is lining up its forces behind the prediction markets, arguing that they serve a useful function, allowing Americans to 鈥渉edge commercial risk鈥 and serve as 鈥渁n important check on our news media.鈥

At least 20 federal suits filed against companies like Kalshi and Polymarket as lawmakers call it 鈥榣oophole鈥 for gambling
While the state's strict ban on gambling hasn鈥檛 changed, fast-growing daily fantasy sports and prediction market apps are giving Texans new ways to wager without leaving home.
Three West Coast tribes won federal approval in the Biden administration's final weeks to build controversial casinos miles away from their reservations. Tribal leaders from opposing nations are wondering: Will the incoming Trump administration shut them down when he takes office?

When Dino Beltran scans a 68-acre vineyard in the heart of Sonoma County, he sees land where his ancestors traded goods with other tribes, long before tourists flocked to the storied California wine region.

For decades a small, landless tribe in Northern California has been on a mission to get land, open a casino and tap into the gaming market enjoyed by so many other tribes that earn millions of dollars annually. The Koi Nation鈥檚 chances of owning a Las Vegas-style casino seemed impossible until a federal court ruling in 2019 cleared the way for the tiny tribe to find a financial partner to buy land and place it into a trust to make it eligible for a casino.