Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming casinos from intuitive, human-run operations into data-driven ecosystems that adjust in real time. Algorithms track player behavior across slots, tables, and online platforms, predicting who might leave, who might spend more, and what offer will keep them playing. Deloitte estimates that, when used effectively, this technology can lift casino revenue by as much as 30%, a figure that explains the industry’s accelerating embrace of AI tools.
Leaders like former Amaya Gaming CEO David Baazov have publicly championed embedding AI deep into gaming environments, from recommendation engines to risk systems. AI-powered chatbots now handle support around the clock, with McKinsey reporting cost reductions of about 40% in customer service for adopters. Yet behind the efficiency lies a moral dilemma: casinos must protect personal data, confront algorithmic bias, and avoid exploiting vulnerable players. In a business built on risk, the greatest gamble may be how far they let machines decide what happens next.