Gaming Corps Lands OLG Slot Deal as Ontario iCasino Hits CA$882M
Gaming Corps has gone live with OLG iCasino in Ontario, giving the supplier a foothold with a state-run operator whose digital gaming proceeds hit CA$882 million last fiscal year, according to a 25 June 2026 report first published by EE Gaming and republished by HIPTHER.
The rollout includes football-themed titles timed around the summer football calendar. Games going live with OLG include Goals to Glory: Football Fever, Penalty Champion: Goals to Glory and Goals to Glory: Instant Blitz, part of Gaming Corps’ Instant Blitz series.
OLG is a provincial crown agency that has operated in Ontario since 1975. Its remit spans land-based gaming facilities, lottery games, internet gaming, bingo and electronic gaming products at Charitable Gaming Centres.
OLG’s latest annual report states the corporation operates iCasino, iLottery and iSports through OLG.ca and its mobile apps. In fiscal 2024-25, OLG reported CA$882 million in Digital Gaming proceeds, up from CA$750 million the previous year. The corporation said Digital Gaming exceeded budget, primarily due to higher than expected iCasino player counts and strong iLottery performance.
Gaming Corps Chief Commercial Officer Graham Greensmith said the OLG launch gives the supplier visibility in a regulated North American market and allows it to bring football-themed releases to market as global football moves into focus.
Ian Shelswell, Director of iCasino Product, Partnerships and Development at OLG, said Gaming Corps’ portfolio adds variety to OLG’s iCasino catalogue, citing football-themed releases, instant-win content, slot franchises and game mechanics.
For Gaming Corps, the deal adds a public-sector Canadian customer, not just another distribution point. Ontario is crowded with private operators, but OLG carries scale and brand recognition. Supplier access to a state-run platform helps studios prove content credibility before pitching to private operators in the same province.
💡 TGJ Take
OLG’s CA$882M Digital Gaming haul, beating budget on higher iCasino player counts, shows this is a growing channel, not a courtesy placement. For Gaming Corps, landing OLG gives it a reference customer to pitch the same football-themed catalogue to Ontario’s private operators, who compete for the same player base. For other mid-tier suppliers, the lesson is timing: content tied to a live tournament window gets placement decisions made faster than evergreen slot pitches. Watch whether Gaming Corps turns this into a repeat slot on OLG’s roadmap or stays a one-off seasonal drop.