REEVO announced it has received a Manufacturer Suitability Licence, Category A1, from the Hellenic Gaming Commission. It has also been entered into the regulator’s Registry of Manufacturers. According to the company, the approval covers both its in-house games and its aggregation platform. The license runs for seven years.
What the Greek License Changes
In Greece, supplier access is not automatic. The country separates operator licensing from supplier suitability, and B2B companies must qualify under a separate compliance track before they can work with licensed operators.
On the Hellenic Gaming Commission’s official online licensing pages, manufacturer suitability licenses sit inside the wider remote-gambling framework created under the post-2020 regime. The public-service entry for this license describes it as the approval needed by companies supplying technical means and materials used by gambling license holders. In practice, that makes the Greek approval a working B2B access point.
The regulatory bar is also fairly clear. For Category A1 applicants, Greece’s official public-service registry says a supplier must:
- Already hold a relevant license from a competent EU or EEA regulator;
- Have ISO/IEC 27001 certification (or show it has started the certification process);
- Pay a €5,000 application fee and a €25,000 annual fee for maintaining the registration.
That does not make Greece the hardest market in Europe. However, it does show that supplier approval comes with real compliance and cost commitments.
Why the Approval Carries Weight
As seen in that context, REEVO’s Greek entry shows that it has managed to pass through a system designed to sift through who can supply regulated operators. Such achievements are significant in markets where public registers and licensing categories are part of the enforcement system.
There is also the time factor. As seen from the studio’s publications, REEVO was granted certification in Peru for its aggregation platform on March 5 and announced the MGA B2B license on February 16. Therefore, the studio’s Greek approval is part of a wider push into the regulated market.
What Comes Next for REEVO
The next market test is what follows from this newly acquired licene. Approval of suppliers is only meaningful when it leads to further integrations and launches. Greece is providing REEVO with just that opportunity.
While this is another positive move from the regulatory side, market observers should also look to see if REEVO can leverage it to build recurring distribution with local licensed brands.


