TaDa Expands European Reach Through New iGP Partnership
TaDa Gaming has signed a new partnership with iGP, extending the supplier’s reach across multiple regulated European markets through iGP’s aggregation network. The deal will add TaDa’s slot, crash, and fish-shooting portfolio to operators connected to the iGaming Platform ecosystem.
The partnership strengthens TaDa’s push across Europe at a time when suppliers are increasingly relying on aggregators and PAM providers to accelerate distribution without negotiating market-by-market integrations. According to the companies, the agreement will give iGP partners access to TaDa’s full content library, including its fish-shooting titles that continue to differentiate the supplier from traditional slot-focused competitors.
Europe has become a priority growth region for TaDa over the past year. The supplier has expanded its presence through a series of distribution agreements involving operators, aggregators, and service providers across Italy and other regulated jurisdictions. Recent deals with companies including Octavian Lab and AdmiralBet signaled a clear focus on Southern European regulated markets.
For iGP, the agreement adds another content supplier to its strategy, which is increasingly focused on expanding aggregation depth and localized offerings. Competition between PAM and aggregation providers has intensified over the last 18 months as operators look to reduce integration costs and shorten launch timelines in regulated markets.
💡 TGJ Take
This deal matters less for the individual games involved and more for the distribution model behind it. Suppliers entering Europe now need aggregator partnerships to scale efficiently across fragmented regulated markets, especially in Italy and Southern Europe where certification and localization slow down direct expansion. For smaller studios, competing without aggregator access is becoming increasingly difficult. Operators also benefit here: broader aggregation stacks reduce integration workloads and shorten content deployment cycles across multiple jurisdictions.