On a phone screen, the line between a shopping cart and a casino wallet can look thin. The same swipe that orders dinner, books a ride, or redeems a loyalty perk can also open a digital casino lobby filled with “new releases”, limited-time promos, and notifications tuned to a user’s habits.
That overlap reflects a wider shift in the internet economy. UN Trade and Development has reported that business e-commerce sales across 43 economies approached the tens of trillions of dollars, and described e-commerce as among the fastest-growing segments of global activity. Online casinos are increasingly built and marketed inside that same retail-shaped infrastructure, even as gambling remains a tightly regulated product.
From casino lobby to digital storefront
Casino homepages have been redesigned around merchandising logic. Game tiles sit in grids and carousels, organised by themes, volatility, or provider, more like a product catalogue than the old list of “slots” and “tables”.
Grand View Research estimated global online gambling revenue at about £78.7 billion in 2024. Operators chasing that growth have borrowed familiar retail tactics: “featured” placement, seasonal campaigns, and constant testing of what gets surfaced first.
The platform gatekeepers: app stores and licensing rules
For many brands, the first storefront is still the app store. Apple and Google publish rules that shape what a real-money gambling app is allowed to do, down to where it can operate and how it can take payments.
Apple’s App Store Review Guidelines say apps may not use in-app purchase to buy credit or currency for real-money gaming. They also state that real-money gaming apps must have the necessary licensing and permissions, be geo-restricted to permitted locations, and be free on the App Store.
Google Play’s policy sets a similar baseline. Its Play Console documentation says real-money gambling apps must be free to download, may not use Google Play in-app billing, must prevent access in places not covered by a licence, and must display responsible gambling information, alongside measures designed to keep underage users out.
Checkout, with friction by design
In retail, payment choice is part of conversion. In online casinos, payment choice is also tied to age checks, geolocation, and anti-money-laundering controls. Deposits and withdrawals often become the point where platform rules, bank rules, and regulator expectations meet.
Worldpay’s Global Payments Report has tracked the rise of digital wallets as a default checkout option. In a 2024 release about the report, Worldpay projected that by 2027, digital wallets would account for more than £25 trillion in global transaction value, or 49% of all sales online and at point of sale combined. As wallets and instant transfers become normal in e-commerce, gambling operators are pulled in the same direction, while still adding verification steps that retailers can often avoid.
Discovery layers: search, affiliates, and retail-style marketing
Digital retail depends on discovery, and casinos increasingly do too. The path from awareness to sign-up often runs through the same channels that sell consumer goods: search, short-form video, comparison pages, and performance advertising, where permitted.
Affiliate marketing has become part of the industry’s acquisition plumbing, offering side-by-side breakdowns that resemble travel and insurance aggregators. That is where BonusFinder often shows up, presenting bonus terms and key differences in a format that functions like product copy, for a market with too many options to hold in one head.
Marketing rules can reshape those funnels. Google’s advertising policy says it supports responsible gambling advertising and requires compliance with local gambling laws and industry standards, embedding gambling promotion inside the broader compliance culture that now governs digital ads.
Loyalty and the data business behind the games
Retention tools that once belonged to retail and subscription apps are now standard across many online casinos. Tiered loyalty programs, personalised offers, and automated messaging are powered by analytics stacks that look increasingly familiar across industries.
That expansion sits alongside regulatory pressure for stronger consumer protection. In a 2025 speech, UK Gambling Commission chief executive Andrew Rhodes said the Commission is “here to license it and regulate it”, and argued that evidence matters in what he described as an intense public debate around gambling.
Rhodes also described a push toward richer operational data, calling “real-time information” a chance to better understand risk while avoiding unnecessary friction for customers who do not need it. In the same briefing, he pointed to enforcement work against the illegal market, including hundreds of cease-and-desist notices and large-scale URL removals during the year.
A retail-like supply chain, built from third parties
Behind the interface, online casinos operate as integration businesses. Games are sourced from studios, payments depend on specialist processors, and identity checks often come from vendors that also serve banks and fintech apps. The casino brand becomes the wrapper around a supply chain of software and compliance services.
Apple’s guidelines emphasise that developers are responsible for what happens inside their apps, including third-party ad networks, analytics services, and SDKs. That mirrors the logic of other digital marketplaces, where platform access comes with accountability for downstream partners.
Where the convergence runs into limits
The similarities with retail have clear boundaries. Age verification, location controls, self-exclusion schemes, deposit limits, and advertising restrictions create ceilings on the kinds of frictionless growth tactics a conventional retailer might pursue.
Digital retail itself is also moving toward stricter platform governance around payments and privacy. The result is a partial convergence: casinos borrow the tools of retail, while regulators and app stores impose guardrails that make a casino checkout a different kind of transaction.
Final Thoughts
Taken together, the shift places online casinos inside the same system that powers app-based shopping and subscription entertainment. The customer journey is mediated by marketplaces, policies, payment products, and data-driven retention tools, not only by brand preference for a single operator.
In that environment, the change is structural as much as cosmetic. Casinos now operate as digital storefronts inside a rules-based economy.








