Blask currently tracks more than 5,000 iGaming brands operating across 133 countries, offering a rare global view of the iGaming landscape.
Only six operators worldwide have established a presence in more than 100 markets, making them genuinely exceptional cases in the industry.
Stake, 1xBet, Megapari, Mostbet, Melbet, and 1win lead the global leaderboard by geographic reach, though their market positions differ significantly beneath the surface.
Some brands dominate tier-3 and grey markets, while others generate large engagement volumes inside major economies despite relatively small visibility shares.
Stake stands out among this group by combining major positions across tier-1 economies, regulated markets, and high-value offshore regions simultaneously, rather than concentrating around a single region.
Japan is the only country where Stake leads by BAP, though Canada, India, Norway, and several Middle Eastern countries also rank among its high-demand markets.
Canada, India, Argentina, Australia, and the UAE all generate major CEB volumes for Stake, with several of those markets sitting well outside the brand’s top BAP rankings.
Among Stake’s most active markets, the fastest year-on-year growth comes from Mexico, Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Norway, pointing to strong momentum in Latin America.
1xBet operates across 115 countries and holds BAP leadership in 14 of them, with Somalia, Mauritania, Algeria, Egypt, and Burkina Faso among its strongest positions, each exceeding 50% demand share.
Egypt stands out as one of the operator’s largest core markets, combining a number-one BAP position with more than $200 million in projected CEB revenue.
The United States generates the highest CEB volume for 1xBet despite the operator not appearing to maintain an active presence or openly target that market.
Outside Africa, 1xBet’s largest CEB contributors include Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, India, and South Korea, with the fastest year-on-year growth coming from Ireland, Spain, Mexico, Jordan, and Indonesia.
Megapari offers one of the widest global footprints in the dataset, yet the operator holds minimal local market share almost everywhere it appears.
The brand’s best BAP result is a sixth-place finish in Egypt, with no country in the dataset crossing even a 1% visibility share for Megapari.
Morocco, Egypt, Burkina Faso, Senegal, and Jordan rank among Megapari’s top BAP markets, though all remain far behind local leaders in each territory.
The Philippines, Canada, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Australia recorded the fastest year-on-year growth among Megapari’s commercially significant markets, despite extremely low BAP levels across the board.
Mostbet’s activity is heavily concentrated around Central Asia and nearby CIS countries, with Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan standing out as its top BAP markets where the brand ranks second with demand shares above 15%.
The United States generates the highest projected revenue for Mostbet despite the brand not appearing to actively target or maintain a visible operating presence there.
Moldova, Colombia, Poland, Mexico, and Portugal posted the fastest year-on-year growth rates for Mostbet, signalling a notable shift toward Latin America and Europe beyond its traditional base.
Melbet’s strategy leans heavily toward Africa, MENA, and smaller emerging markets, with Kyrgyzstan representing the brand’s top global BAP position at nearly 29% demand share.
Burkina Faso, Mauritania, and Egypt all hold second-place BAP positions for Melbet, while Jordan, Togo, Senegal, Yemen, and Morocco also rank among its key visibility markets.
Lebanon, Ethiopia, Jordan, Kuwait, and Argentina posted some of the fastest year-on-year growth rates in the dataset for Melbet, reinforcing its continued expansion across offshore and developing markets.
The widest global reach in iGaming belongs predominantly to offshore operators active across grey and emerging markets, with Africa, MENA, Central Asia, and parts of Asia appearing repeatedly across every top-ranked brand.
Geographic coverage alone, however, reveals little about actual market power, since some operators dominate dozens of smaller countries while others generate massive engagement in major economies without leading locally.

