The UAE’s regulated gaming market is taking another step forward, with Malaysia-based RGB International Bhd reportedly approved as a gaming-related vendor in the country. In simple terms, that means RGB can supply electronic gaming machines, provide related services, and support licensed gaming venues once they are operating.
For players, this does not mean RGB is opening a casino or taking bets. It means the company is allowed to work behind the scenes with licensed operators by supplying machines, maintenance, and gaming technology.
Why Players Should Care
A vendor licence matters because casino games are only as trustworthy as the companies supplying and maintaining them. If a slot machine, gaming terminal, or casino system comes from an approved vendor, it has passed through the UAE’s formal licensing process instead of entering the market through an unregulated route.
The UAE’s General Commercial Gaming Regulatory Authority (GCGRA) says only businesses and individuals with a valid licence can operate, work in, or provide products and services to the commercial gaming sector. The regulator also warns that playing through unlicensed operators, whether online or in person, can carry penalties for consumers.
RGB Is a Supplier, Not a Casino
RGB International is mainly known as a distributor of electronic gaming machines, amusement machines, casino equipment, accessories, self-service solutions, and slot management systems across Asian markets including Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Macau, and Nepal.
That matters because the UAE gaming market is still young. Before players ever sit down at a legal casino floor, regulators need suppliers, technology providers, payment systems, testing partners, and compliance companies in place. RGB’s approval adds another supplier to that growing network.
Wynn Al Marjan Island Is Still the Big Player-Facing Story
The biggest reason this licence is getting attention is Wynn Al Marjan Island, the UAE’s first licensed land-based gaming resort. The GCGRA’s public licensee page lists Island 3 AMI FZ-LLC, doing business as Wynn Al Marjan, as the country’s land-based gaming facilities licensee.
Wynn says the Ras Al Khaimah resort is set to debut in 2027 on Al Marjan Island, less than 50 miles from Dubai International Airport. The project is being marketed as a luxury beachside resort with restaurants, nightlife, shopping, a private beach, pools, a marina, and entertainment—not just gaming.
More Choice, But Only Inside Licensed Venues
For everyday players, the takeaway is simple: more approved vendors could mean more game variety once legal casino gaming opens in the UAE. A company like RGB may help bring in electronic gaming machines and support services that players would normally see on a regulated casino floor.
But the licence does not mean players can legally use any site or venue claiming to offer UAE gaming. The safe rule is this: only play with operators clearly licensed by the GCGRA.
RGB Eyes Growth Beyond Asia
The approval also gives RGB a chance to expand beyond its traditional Asian markets. The company has already secured about 2,000 machine orders this year and is targeting around 3,000 units, with possible upside to 3,500–3,800 units if regional tensions ease, according to reporting from The Edge Malaysia.
Its latest financials show demand is still active: RGB’s first-quarter revenue rose 19% year-on-year to MYR87.4 million, though profit fell due to foreign exchange losses.
Bottom Line for Players
RGB’s UAE approval is not a casino opening announcement. It is a sign that the UAE is building the regulated gaming supply chain needed before legal casino gaming becomes available to players.
For players, the message is clear: expect more regulated gaming infrastructure, more global suppliers, and eventually more game choice—but stick only to GCGRA-licensed operators when the market opens.













