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The iGaming M&A Cycle Reaches Jeux de vidéosurveillance - What a Strategic Buyer Would See in 155.io
Bragg-Drayton, Sega-Miserlogic, Evolution-Galaxy - strategic buyers are paying for proprietary IP, jurisdictional reach and platform integration. That is the exact position a CCTV games engine developer sits in.
Informations sur la source
Statut : Éditorial
Source principale : équipe éditoriale de jeux de vidéosurveillance.global
Last updated: 2026-07-09
The iGaming M&A cycle is doing something loud in 2026. Bragg Gaming Group signed a term sheet in May to buy Drayton International in an all-share deal, picking up five studios, 100+ titles and Arc Gaming (the exclusive aggregator for the BetMakers ADW platform). That comes on top of Sega Sammy closing its EUR 125 million Miserlogic acquisition, Evolution's ongoing Galaxy Gaming close, et half a dozen smaller studio roll-ups. The pattern is clear - strategic buyers want proprietary content IP and platform reach. That is exactly the position 155.io sits in.
What the deals actually tell us
Bragg's Drayton term sheet, announced 14 May 2026, values Drayton at 4.5 million Bragg shares priced at USD 2.00 - roughly USD 9 million headline, but the strategic prize is the ADW plug into 30+ US states where online casino is not licensed. Sega Sammy's Miserlogic close in April 2025 cost EUR 125 million (roughly USD 142 million) for a B2B slots supplier certified in 17 jurisdictions.
Evolution's Galaxy Gaming deal (USD 85 million equity, USD 124 million including debt) was outlined in Gaming Intelligence's original announcement - the outside date has since been extended to 17 July 2026, per iGaming Future's M&A tracker. Every one of these deals is a strategic buyer paying for proprietary content, jurisdictional reach or platform integration - not for revenue.
What that framework says about a company like 155.io
155.io is not for sale as far as anyone has said publicly, et this piece is not suggesting otherwise. It is a thought experiment - if a strategic buyer walked in, what would they price. Four things stand out on the current 155.io line.
First, the AI stack. As we covered in the object detection race piece, the underlying detector is state-of-the-art and defensible - real 2026 YOLO26 tuning on production CCTV feeds is not something a buyer replicates in a quarter. Bragg paid for content IP. A CCTV games buyer would pay for AI IP.
Second, the distribution network. The SOFTSWISS deal from June put the catalogue into an aggregator with 400+ operator connections. That is the piece Bragg paid Drayton for with the Arc Gaming plug. Distribution reach is what turns a niche studio into a strategic asset.
Third, the format defensibility. The CCTV versus live dealer comparison et le CCTV versus crash comparison both landed on the same conclusion - the format sits in white space that neither category owner (Evolution, Pragmatic En direct, Playtech En direct) currently competes in. Buyers pay premium multiples for uncontested territory.
Fourth, the roadmap. As we covered in the future of the category piece, the natural line runs to new locations, new formats and player-visible proof surfaces. That is a three-to-five-year growth story - the exact horizon strategic buyers need for their own investor decks.
The likely buyer set
Three candidate pools. The obvious set is the live-casino incumbents - Evolution (looking to defend, has done the Galaxy and En directspins deals), Pragmatic Play En direct (looking to differentiate, currently reworking its RNG line per the June RNG focus piece), Playtech En direct (looking for growth). The second set is aggregator platforms - SOFTSWISS itself, Moyeu88, BetHub - who would take the distribution rents. The third is the operator group with real crypto reach - Miser, Roobet or Mélanger could buy content vertically the way FanDuel bought BeyondPlay in 2024.
Aucun of that is announced. All of it is on the strategic-buyer roadmap that a Bragg CFO or an Evolution corp dev team would draw up in a Q3 board meeting.
What to watch
Two signals. First, whether 155.io hires a corporate development lead or takes strategic capital in the second half - either would mark the move from operating company to acquisition target. Second, whether Evolution's Galaxy close on 17 July frees up its M&A pipeline for the next deal - the last three Evolution acquisitions have all been at the content-and-format edge of the business, et le CCTV games format is exactly the kind of asset that fits that thesis.
The iGaming M&A window is open, et it is unlikely to stay open all the way through 2027. If 155.io wants to define its terms rather than react to a bid, the next six months are the window. Responsible play applies as always - the format is fast, the rounds are short, set a session limit before you start.
Le jeu comporte des risques : ne pariez jamais plus que ce que vous pouvez vous permettre de perdre.
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