Singapore Approval Opens Door for Paradise’s LT Game

Singapore’s Gambling Regulatory Authority has approved LT Smart (Singapore) Pte. Ltd., a subsidiary of Paradise Entertainment, as a gaming machine manufacturer. The status is effective June 25, 2026. The approval is granted under Section 103A of the Casino Control Act 2006. It lets LT Smart supply gaming machines directly to Singapore’s two licensed casinos, Marina Bay Sands and Resorts World Sentosa. Paradise confirmed the GRA’s gaming equipment register now lists the subsidiary as an Approved Manufacturer.

Approved manufacturer status under Singapore’s regime has no fixed tenure. It does not require periodic renewal, according to the GRA. That removes a recurring compliance step other jurisdictions typically impose on suppliers.

LT Game COO Eddie Au told GGRAsia the approval makes the company eligible to sell its gaming products directly into the Singapore market. Paradise has not specified which LT Game products it will target there. The company is best known for live multi-game terminals and electronic table game systems. It has also been expanding slot machine production.

Singapore’s casino market is small by unit count. It still functions as a compliance benchmark suppliers use when pursuing licences elsewhere in Asia, given the GRA’s screening standards.

The approval lands as Paradise restructures its revenue base. The company’s Casino Kam Pek Paradise management arrangement ended on December 2, 2025. SJM Resorts declined to renew the service agreement. Paradise’s 2025 annual report lists LT Smart (Singapore) under its electronic gaming equipment and systems sales and leasing operations. That makes the Singapore approval a revenue relevant step, not a symbolic one. The company has also added Macau production capacity to support LT Game’s shift toward broader regional supply.

💡 TGJ Take

Singapore won’t move Paradise’s revenue line on its own. The market has only two casinos. What this approval does is give LT Game a regulatory reference point it can use when pursuing licences in less established Asian markets. Paradise needs that story now that Kam Pek Paradise management fees are gone. Suppliers should watch for an actual equipment order at MBS or RWS within the next year. Without one, this stays a reputational win, not a commercial one.

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