Stakelogic BV has agreed to a £122,835 settlement with the UK Gambling Commission following an investigation into technical non-compliance across its slot portfolio. The regulatory action addresses instances where game cycle times fell below the mandated minimum interval required for UK players.
The case originated when the software provider self-reported that Tiger Temple 88 operated with a 1.97-second cycle, violating the Responsible Product Design Remote Technical Standard 14D. This regulation requires a minimum 2.5-second gap between the start of one game cycle and the next. Upon further review, Stakelogic identified that 15 additional titles also failed to meet this standard, with timing shortfalls ranging from 0.001 to 0.675 seconds.
The regulator attributed these errors to the company’s reliance on a manual stopwatch for speed verification.
Regulatory Findings and Settlement Details
Non-compliance was detected across varying periods, with Tiger Temple 88 affected between 28 May 2025 and 30 May 2025. The remaining titles showed intermittent failures between 31 October 2021 and 30 October 2025. The Commission noted aggravating factors, including the failure to suspend Tiger Temple 88 immediately upon discovery and delays in conducting a full product review.
Conversely, Stakelogic received credit for voluntarily disabling all games in the Great Britain market and cooperating fully with the inquiry.
John Pierce, Director of Enforcement and Intelligence at the Gambling Commission, emphasized that relying on manual measurement tools is unacceptable for a business with modern technological resources. Stakelogic acknowledged the breaches, stating that internal processes fell short of required standards.