14.07.2026 · 4 min read
Infingame reveals the factors that determine game visibility inside modern aggregation platforms

Infingame, a leading aggregator in the iGaming industry, identifies five key factors that increasingly determine whether games gain exposure inside modern aggregation ecosystems.
According to Infingame, suppliers frequently focus on game launches while underestimating the importance of post-launch performance indicators that influence long-term visibility.
As competition among game suppliers intensifies, simply releasing more titles is no longer enough to secure distribution success. Visibility within aggregation platforms is increasingly determined by performance signals, player behavior, and content strategy rather than portfolio size alone.
With operators now offering access to tens of thousands of games through aggregation platforms, content discoverability has emerged as one of the industry's most significant challenges. While game development studios continue to expand production, only a relatively small percentage of titles generate the majority of player activity.
Based on aggregated observations across its platform, Infingame estimates that fewer than 15% of available titles account for more than 75% of total player engagement within a typical casino environment. The remaining content often struggles to gain meaningful visibility despite being technically available to players.
"The market has reached a point where distribution alone is no longer the challenge," said Jana Filagina, Head of Commercial at Infingame. "The real question is how suppliers ensure their games are actually discovered, tested, and revisited by players once they enter highly competitive casino environments."
First, performance consistency matters over launch performance. While strong launch numbers remain valuable, operators are becoming more selective about promoting titles that demonstrate sustainable engagement over time.
Games that maintain stable session duration, repeat play frequency, and retention metrics often receive greater long-term exposure than titles that experience short-lived spikes in activity immediately after release. According to Infingame, operators are increasingly prioritising content that contributes to sustainable revenue growth rather than temporary acquisition campaigns.
Second, regional relevance matters more than global popularity. One of the most common mistakes suppliers make is assuming that successful performance in one market automatically translates into demand elsewhere.
Operational data observed across multiple jurisdictions shows significant differences in player preferences, volatility tolerance, session length, and feature engagement between regions. As a result, suppliers that localise mechanics, themes, bonus structures, and promotional support often achieve stronger distribution outcomes than those relying solely on global release strategies.
Third, promotional readiness is becoming a competitive advantage. Games designed to integrate seamlessly with tournaments, challenges, missions, and leaderboard-driven campaigns frequently achieve higher visibility across operator networks.
Infingame notes that operators increasingly evaluate how easily content can be incorporated into retention and engagement activities before deciding which titles receive premium placement.
"Content that can support multiple promotional formats creates more opportunities for operators," Filagina explained. "A game that performs well in tournaments, missions, and segmented campaigns naturally receives more exposure throughout its lifecycle."
Then, data transparency drives stronger operator adoption. The availability of detailed performance analytics is becoming increasingly important during supplier evaluations.
Operators are placing greater emphasis on metrics such as conversion rates, retention indicators, average session length, player re-engagement behaviour, and market-specific performance benchmarks. Studios that provide transparent performance data often enable operators to make faster commercial decisions and optimise content placement more effectively.
Finally, content quality is replacing content quantity. Infingame reports that operators are becoming increasingly focused on portfolio optimisation rather than portfolio expansion, seeking suppliers that consistently deliver commercially relevant content instead of simply increasing release volume.
As recommendation engines, personalised lobbies, and AI-driven content discovery continue to evolve, the ability to deliver high-performing games is expected to become even more important than the total number of available titles.
"The industry is entering a new phase where visibility has become one of the most valuable currencies," Filagina added. "The suppliers that succeed will not necessarily be those producing the highest number of games. They will be the studios that understand player behaviour, support operators with actionable data, and consistently create content that remains relevant long after launch."
As aggregation platforms continue to expand and casino content libraries grow larger, discoverability is expected to become an increasingly important strategic focus for suppliers, operators, and platform providers alike. Infingame believes that the next generation of successful content distribution will be defined not by access, but by visibility.
About Infingame
Infingame is a leading game aggregator built to help operators move faster and scale smarter. Through a single API integration, the platform gives access to a portfolio of over 16,000 games from more than 150 providers, allowing partners to launch quickly without dealing with multiple integrations.
Delivered via a single API, Infingame offers unparalleled technical excellence, the industry's fastest spin times, exclusive tournaments and strategic partnerships with top-tier operators in North America, LatAm and beyond. Spanning a portfolio of slots, crash games, sweepstakes and live casino, book a demo via the LinkedIn page, website or at sales@infingame.com.





