A modular platform for connected iGaming operations
Modus Gaming is designed to bring core operator workflows into a controlled, extensible backend with clear integration boundaries.
For operators replacing fragmented systems
An iGaming platform provider is evaluated when account, wallet, content, promotion, payment, risk, and reporting responsibilities are spread across tools that no longer share context. The fit is strongest for teams that want a single controlled core with documented integration points rather than another isolated product.
How the platform supports this
Platform core
Coordinate player account, wallet, ledger, permissions, and configuration responsibilities through one controlled foundation.
Modular operations
Connect casino, sportsbook, bonus, CRM, payment, risk, and reporting workflows without forcing every team onto a single rigid tool.
Integration model
Work with specialist services through defined APIs and accountable operational processes rather than ad hoc point-to-point connections.
Operator controls
Give authorized teams permissioned configuration, visibility, and auditable actions across brands and operating contexts.
Operational reporting
Bring cross-module activity into consistent reporting so operations, finance, risk, and marketing work from shared definitions.
What to consider before implementation
Migration scope
Map which existing systems are replaced, integrated, or retired and how account, wallet, and history data will be reconciled.
Integration ownership
Confirm which providers and internal services connect to the platform and who owns each contract, incident path, and release.
Authorization and scope
Clarify that product availability, jurisdictions, and commercial terms depend on operator requirements, licensing, and approval.
Common questions
What does a B2B iGaming platform provider do?
It supplies the backend systems an operator uses to run gaming operations: player accounts, wallet and ledger, content and promotion management, payments, risk workflows, and reporting, connected through controlled integration boundaries.
How is a platform provider different from a single product vendor?
A platform provider coordinates multiple operational modules around a shared core and integration model, where a single product vendor typically solves one function and leaves the operator to integrate it with everything else.
Related pages
Discuss your requirements with our team
Tell us about your operation and the markets you serve. We will walk through how the platform fits.