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India’s gaming industry braces for rebirth after real-money ban

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Regulation

2025-11-10

The lights dimmed for India’s real-money gaming sector in August, but the story is far from over.

Developers across the country are regrouping, rethinking, and rebuilding under the shadow of the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act (PROGA) 2025, which outlawed money-based games almost overnight.


A community caught off guard


Developers are still reeling from a law that changed everything, but resignation is giving way to resolve.


The bill passed quietly through the Lok Sabha on 20 August, triggering what many insiders describe as a full reset for India’s online gaming ecosystem. The act’s stated goal was to regulate, yet its sweeping language effectively banned real-money gaming altogether.


Ranjana Adhikari, Partner at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., said:

“PROGA has completely altered the landscape of India’s online gaming industry.”

“While its stated intent is regulation and consumer protection, the law’s current form operates as a near-total prohibition. The sector is in a holding pattern waiting for judicial clarity while simultaneously trying to reimagine business models that can survive under this new regime.”


Legal battles move to the Supreme Court


Petitions pile up as the court prepares to decide the future of India’s gaming sector.


Since PROGA’s approval, industry leaders and investors have challenged its constitutionality. The Supreme Court of India is now handling a consolidated set of petitions transferred from multiple state courts to avoid conflicting judgments.


A bench led by Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan has ordered the federal government to submit a full response by 26 November, after critics argued that it moved “with great speed” but offered little clarity on implementation.


Adhikari noted that “until the Supreme Court determines the constitutional validity of the act, no one can predict how, or even when, the sector can legally resume operations.”


The court will also hear a related case calling for a ban on online betting platforms allegedly disguised as social and e-sports games.


Reinvention becomes survival


Developers are adapting fast, turning compliance into creativity.


Despite the uncertainty, India’s gaming studios are already evolving. Many are pivoting toward social and casual games, using in-app purchases and ad-supported models instead of monetary stakes. Others are exploring interactive media, creating short-form “micro-drama” and gamified storytelling experiences to engage audiences within legal limits.


A new wave is also emerging in fintech and wealth-tech, where gamification is being used to teach investment, personal finance, and digital skills. These shifts reflect a broader theme of adaptation, treating compliance not as a constraint but as a creative framework.


Adhikari noted:

“The Indian gaming industry has always shown remarkable adaptability.”

“What we’re witnessing now is a phase of recalibration — companies are not just waiting for judicial clarity but actively exploring permissible formats that can sustain user engagement and investor confidence. The smartest players are already treating compliance as a design principle, not an afterthought.”


A sector too valuable to lose


For many, the government’s ban risks sidelining a key pillar of India’s digital economy.


Before PROGA, the real-money gaming industry contributed over 200,000 jobs, supported more than 400 startups, and generated USD 2.3 billion in taxes. It was a cornerstone of the Digital India and Make in India initiatives.


Yet the new law was pushed through without broad consultation, leaving developers scrambling to adapt and international investors watching from the sidelines.


Still, optimism endures. Many within the industry see opportunity in change, believing the sector will emerge leaner, more innovative, and better aligned with long-term compliance.


Adhikari said:

“Now, the fate of the RMG industry depends entirely on the outcome of the challenge in the Supreme Court — and on how the Online Gaming Authority chooses to regulate permissible offerings.”


India’s developers have rebuilt before, and they seem ready to do it again. 

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