Esports Could Eclipse Sports Betting

Will esports betting become more lucrative then sports betting? Quentin Martin, CEO of the esports betting company Luckbox, insists it will and is ready to put his money where his mouth is to back up his claim.

“The Covid-19 lockdown definitely accelerated esports a couple of years into the future for sure,” Martin told Gambling Insider. “Most countries left lockdown months ago and we saw a drop-off to some degree but nothing substantial. We have retained 75 percent of players that we gained during the lockdown.”

Martin said esports is more popular with the 18-25 age group. If that demographic holds true for the next half-century, esports has a profitable future.

Fast forward 50 years and this age group is approaching 75, perhaps in retirement homes playing each other at computer games. “This is why I believe companies that are only paying esports lip service are damaging their brand and longevity going forward,” Martin said.

In related news, Esports Entertainment Group agreed to purchase ggCircuit LLC and Helix eSports LLC for about $43 million. The Helix acquisition included LANDuel, described as a proprietary player vs. player platform that permits skill based wagering on third-party video games both in both gaming centers and at some point, online.

LANduel is working with the New Jersey Department of Gaming Enforcement on a pilot program, according to GO Gaming. The upshot of this activity speaks to Esports potential in the legalized gambling sphere.

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On This Day In Sports History

On July 3, 1966, Atlanta Braves pitcher Tony Cloninger made MLB history by hitting two grand slams in a 17-3 rout of the San Francisco Giants at Candlestick Park. Driving in nine runs—a single-game record for a pitcher—Cloninger remains the only pitcher in major league history to hit two grand slams in a single game, or even an entire career.

On This Day In Sports History

On July 3, 2009, John Kane triggered five video poker jackpots in under an hour at Vegas's Silverton Casino. The secret? A hyper-specific software glitch that let him replay winning hands at max stakes just by pressing a precise sequence of buttons. The feds charged Kane and his partner under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, but a judge dismissed the case. The ruling? Simply pushing the buttons a casino provides to the public—even in a glitchy order—isn't hacking. The exploit forced IGT to rush out global firmware patches, cementing it as one of the wilder legal loopholes in modern gaming history.