Reevo scored two wins this week. The Malta-based aggregator added InOut Games to its platform while securing a Swedish operating licence from Spelinspektionen.
InOut Games develops crash titles and instant-play games. Their portfolio now joins Reevo’s aggregation layer, giving operators single-integration access to the content.
Daniel Cuc runs account management at Reevo. He called the partnership “an exciting addition” that fits the company’s content strategy.
Why This Partnership Works for Operators
Aggregation deals like this save operators time and resources. They don’t need separate integrations for each supplier. One contract with Reevo gets them InOut Games’ full catalogue.
The content itself targets quick sessions. These games work well for mobile players who want fast gameplay without complex features.
InOut Games built configurability into their titles. Operators can adjust RTP settings based on local rules or their own commercial needs. That flexibility matters in markets with specific regulatory requirements.
What Reevo Gets from Swedish Approval
The Spelinspektionen licence lets Reevo supply content directly to Swedish operators. It’s a compliance requirement, not just a nice-to-have.
Sweden runs one of Europe’s stricter regulated markets. Getting approved there means meeting Swedish reporting standards and following their player protection rules.
For Reevo, it opens commercial opportunities with locally-licensed operators. Swedish operators can now add Reevo’s aggregated content without regulatory concerns.
Karl Grech leads business development at Reevo. He said the approval “opens the door to new opportunities” in a respected European market.
The company previously expanded in Europe through 7melons, Grand Casino Bern’s online brand. So they’ve got some regulated market experience already.
How This Positions Reevo in European Markets
Aggregators compete on two fronts: content breadth and regulatory reach. Reevo’s addressing both with these moves.
The InOut Games deal adds niche content that fills a specific gap. Crash games and instant-play titles appeal to different player segments than traditional slots.
Swedish licensing strengthens Reevo’s regulated footprint. More operators in strict European markets can work with them now.
Other aggregators will need to match this dual approach. Content variety alone isn’t enough anymore. Regulatory access matters just as much for operators choosing aggregation partners.
The timing suggests Reevo’s building toward broader European expansion. Sweden’s probably not the last regulated market they’ll target this year.


