Elantil’s Blue Moon

Elantil changed the paradigm on platforms. Not on branding.

View the Substack edition and join the email list for future posts.

An A-team of iGaming veterans got together to rethink how platforms should be built. In the process, they changed the paradigm and created a new category in the market. But rather than leverage this brand gold, their branding is stuck in the old paradigm.

Where Everything Comes Together

iGaming is an ecosystem of abstractions. Money turns into eyeballs. Eyeballs turn into money.

Affiliates, partner networks, media buyers, influencers, and streamers are attention traders. They convert money into eyeballs and send traffic to casinos.

Games turn those eyeballs into money. Exciting and entertaining experiences that make players happy to win $5 after losing $10, again and again and again.

Payments and banks are the rails that move the money and the vaults that store it. Compliance and regulation set the boundaries of this circular flow, and in doing so, legitimize it.

And platforms? Platforms are where everything comes together. Where all the components integrate into a single operation. The control center of the business.

And platforms? Platforms are where everything comes together. Where all the components integrate into a single operation. The control center of the business.

Platform Business

The explosion of platforms we see today, many dozens if not hundreds of providers, happened in part because operators built their tech in-house and then sold it to new operators to offload the cost. Building casino tech takes time, know-how, and a web of integration challenges to make the money-eyeballs-money cycle actually work.

To speed things up, platform businesses packaged a working concept into templates and sold it to eager operators. Look around you. There’s little difference between the large number of platforms all promising nearly the same things: launch fast, pre-packaged configurations, turnkey solutions.

Perhaps it worked in the past. But the market, unsurprisingly, changed.

New markets attracted multitudes of operators competing for players’ attention. To help them engage, retain, and stand out, a wave of solutions promised the world: better games, smoother payment methods, smart retention, exciting gamification. Regulators added pressure too, with new jurisdictions and changing rules evolving alongside the markets.

All of a sudden, the rigid structures that platforms pre-packaged became the bottleneck. What good is launching fast when you end up with a stack that doesn’t flex when you need it to? What good is getting ready-made content, payments, and a license bundled like everyone else’s if you can’t add your own flavor fast enough?

The smartest operators today are the ones building something different. The ones who understand that winning market share takes more than a fast launch. It takes the speed and agility to adapt when players shift and regulators move.

The smartest operators today are the ones building something different. The ones who understand that winning market share takes more than a fast launch. It takes the speed and agility to adapt when players shift and regulators move.

Bare Essentials

Elantil was founded to address exactly that. An A-team of iGaming veterans, with 100+ years of combined experience at GiG, NetEnt, Relax Gaming, and Betfair, saw firsthand that platforms don’t suffer from a lack of capabilities. On the contrary. Packing solutions with endless moving parts isn’t an advantage. It’s bloat that locks operators into stacks that slow them down.

“Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away” is a beautiful quote by French poet Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. Elantil seems to be inspired by it.

They broke down what makes a platform, piece by piece. Identified what’s essential to run an iGaming business, what slows operators down, and what can be stripped away. What they put back together is a lean layer built on four pillars:

1) Marketplace. Platforms are the core of the stack where everything is integrated. But integrations are slow and cumbersome. Each one takes time, money, know-how, manpower, testing, and maintenance.

Content and payment aggregation were built to solve this, but introduced a middleman who charges for the privilege. Elantil’s design philosophy aimed to remove the tech integration hassle entirely, and with the cost of integration dropping thanks to AI, they can. Operators negotiate terms directly with providers, meaning better fees and more competitive operations.

Dozens of solutions pre-integrated, more added weekly, at no cost to operators. Want a new game provider? APM? CRM? The technical integration is a flip of a switch away. No fees. No revenue share. No middleman.

2) Real-Time Data. To be competitive, operators must move fast. They need to react to player behavior as it happens, not hours or days later. Personalizing experiences, triggering the right bonus at the right moment, spotting risk before it escalates, adjusting campaigns on the fly. That level of immediacy requires real-time data.

Elantil realized that real-time data isn’t something you can add as an afterthought. If operators need speed and precision to compete, the data layer has to match. It is an essential part that has to be built into the core. An architectural decision that has to be made on day one, not offered as a marketplace integration.

3) Casino and Sportsbook Builder. The operators who crave speed and agility the most are the ones targeting audiences that are hardest to win. Uber Gen players raised on TikTok and Spotify. Crypto degens who celebrate extreme speculative risk for massive returns. These players expect everything they touch to be instant, effortless, and aware of their culture.

Elantil’s front-end builder lets operators tweak, customize, test, and personalize the look and feel of the player experience. Remember Vegangster and their TikTok-inspired UX? How long before Elantil builds something similar? Tech advantages don’t hold for long. The platform that makes it easiest to meet these players’ expectations wins.

4) Operations Management System (OMS). The nervous system of the platform. A master control panel where everything is managed, from player accounts and workflows to multi-region operations. Elantil’s “non-opinionated” design philosophy means the OMS offers building blocks, not pre-set configurations. It doesn’t decide how your business should run. Launching in a new market? Flip a switch to comply with local requirements. Got favorable terms with a certain APM? Flip a switch and place it top of the list. Need a new gamification engine? Flip a switch and it’s live for your players. No dev, no hassle, no delays.

Beyond the four pillars, Elantil removed frictions that most platforms leave operators to figure out. Source code ownership? It’s yours, no need to weigh the trade-offs of building versus renting your stack. Self-hosting? It’s available, so data sovereignty and regulatory alignment are on your terms, not your provider’s. Multi-wallet and multi-currency? It’s native, so operators don’t have to choose between markets or player types.

What’s left are the bare essentials of running an iGaming business. Lightweight, modular, robust, agile, fast. A platform that lets builders focus on being different. On adapting, changing, competing, and winning.

Elantil didn’t build a better platform. They carved a new category.

What’s left are the bare essentials of running an iGaming business. Lightweight, modular, robust, agile, fast. A platform that lets builders focus on being different. 

Challenger Operators

Elantil isn’t for everyone. And that’s the point.

Using Elantil is not for the faint of heart. Not for first-timers. Not for operators who want a turnkey casino handed to them. Elantil was deliberately built for operators with tech rigor, sharp product sense, and the experience to move as fast as the market demands. Operators that challenge the status quo, with a vision for how their casino should look, feel, and function.

What Elantil offers is the equivalent of mountain climbing gear. Serious gear for serious operators in serious conditions. With it, operators get the speed and agility to compete where others can’t keep up. The bare essentials they need to differentiate, iterate, and win.

These operators don’t just use a platform. They run AI tools, third-party systems, proprietary models. Part of being a building block for these builders is understanding that Elantil has to inter-operate with all of them. Not just accept data, but let external systems trigger actions and influence real-time operations. That’s also what makes Elantil arguably the most AI-ready platform in iGaming. Not because it has AI features, but because it was designed to be one building block among many.

Elantil is the iGaming bare essentials platform that offers speed and agility for operators who aspire to be first. For the challengers. For the winners.

But the market doesn’t know any of this.

Elantil is the iGaming bare essentials platform that offers speed and agility for operators who aspire to be first. For the challengers. For the winners.

Blue Moon

Elantil doesn’t look like a conventional platform precisely because it stripped away what conventional platforms offer. But it can’t afford to call itself something else. “Strategic backbone” might sound elevated, but operators don’t search for strategic backbones. They search for platforms. That’s the category they compare against, and that’s where Elantil has to compete.

But within that category, Elantil has done something every brand dreams of. It created a new subcategory. Lean platforms that include only the bare essentials. That’s not just a positioning. It’s a category of one, for now. And no one can take it away from them. But a category only exists if the market knows about it. And that takes a brand story told consistently, not a product explained in meetings.

The problem is that nowhere in their narrative, messaging, or marketing do you see that positioning. Nowhere do you find the language and terminology that speaks to the elite builders Elantil caters for.

The website’s hero section says “iGaming Platform.” Two words. The most generic label in the industry.

In interviews, the founders do a great job explaining the four pillars and the philosophy behind them. But the story doesn’t carry an emotional payload. It’s not easily memorable. It takes a detailed conversation with a company rep to understand how this new “backbone” helps operators. That’s not a brand that travels on its own. It’s the old paradigm of sales-led growth, one handshake after another.

When asked how they plan to differentiate their brand, the CEO answered: “That’s the great thing about Elantil, we don’t have to! We’re already different by our very nature”. Elantil was founded by veterans who challenged the status quo of platform design. But they still cling to the old belief that the product speaks for itself and branding is optional.

Rather than highlight the lean, robust, fast, and agile nature of what they built. Rather than spread the gospel that 100+ years of iGaming experience brought to the market. Rather than celebrate a refreshing new outlook on how platforms should work, the company puts a mascot, games, and prizes at the front. Fun, sure. Great for foot traffic. But none of it helps the market understand why Elantil matters. It’s marketing. And investing in marketing and investing in brand are not the same thing.

You have a once-in-a-blue-moon category you’re bringing to the market. You are challenging the status quo and helping elite builders drive change. Why is that not enough to win the market’s attention? Why would you need a furry doll to get elite builders to notice? 

Wouldn’t summiting the Everest of iGaming be enough?