Playtech was founded in 1999 by the Israeli entrepreneur
Teddy Sagi in
Tartu, Estonia, with partners from the casino, software engineering and multimedia industries. Playtech launched its first casino product in 2001, and since then it has grown to become the world's leading and largest international designer, developer and licensor of web and mobile application software to the digital gaming industry, whose customers are most of the blue chip companies in this industry (William Hill, Ladbrokes, Bet365 in the UK, Snai and Sisal in Italy, etc.), as well as governments and regulated agencies.; In March 2006, Playtech was floated successfully on the AIM market at a valuation of approximately US$950 million (approximately £550 million). After the passage of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, the company's stock suffered a one-day fall of over 40%. On 22 October 2008, Playtech announced that it would acquire private assets from Teddy Sagi in return for $250 million. Then in March 2011, Playtech bought PT Turnkey Services from Teddy Sagi for £125m. In September 2014, Playtech announced the acquisition of Aristocrat Lotteries from
Aristocrat Leisure, in a EUR €10.5 million deal. In January 2015, many Playtech-powered casino sites announced they were leaving the German market. In February 2015 it was announced that Playtech acquired
YoYo Games, the maker of
GameMaker Studio game development software, for £10.65 million (US$16.4 million). It was revealed in June 2015 that Playtech would acquire the online
foreign exchange trader
Plus500 for a fee of $699 million. This planned deal was terminated in November 2015. In May 2016 Playtech acquired Swedish online game developer Quickspin. The first payment of €24m will represent 100% of the shares of Quickspin on a cash free debt free basis with the remaining €26m to be paid on an earn-out basis depending on Quickspin's EBITDA over the course of 2017 and 2018. In July 2016 Playtech acquired rival operator Best Gaming Technology (BGT) for €138m, as betting groups continue to react to the wave of consolidation that has swept through the industry. Playtech branched out into Romania in January 2017 with the opening of its casino studio based in Bucharest designed to provide live casino games to local online gambling operators. With Playtech's licensing contract with Marvel Comics expiring on 31 March 2017, the provider announced a new partnership with Warner Bros in February 2017 for the development of slots based on DC Comic feature films such as Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, The Dark Knight Trilogy, Suicide Squad and Justice League. In November 2016, Playtech announced the acquisition of CFH Group, a prime of prime broker, to strengthen the
B2B offering in its Financials division which it later named TradeTech Group. In October 2017, Playtech announced that they had acquired BetBuddy, a leading
responsible gambling analytics company. BetBuddy's behavioural identification and modification software will be integrated with Playtech's current player management system in the hopes it can identify and help
problem gambling quicker. In January 2018, Playtech finalised the integration of Featurespace's
machine learning real-time fraud detection platform into its information management systems. The strategic partnership with the
behavioural analytics company aims for Playtech's licensees to identify and reduce fraud attacks. In March 2018, Playtech agreed a deal with Totalizator Sportowy, the provider of the Polish national lottery. In April 2018, Playtech paid €291 million for a 70.6% stake in Italian betting and gaming firm Snaitech. Including Snaitech's debt, the enterprise value of the deal was €846 million. In Sept 2018, Playtech announced that it was selling its 10% stake in
Plus500 Ltd. for a total of £176 million. In November 2018, founder Teddy Sagi sold his remaining shares in Playtech. Though Sagi had been steadily reducing his holdings in the company, the final sale came not long after investor Jason Ader urged the company to shed its remaining ties to Sagi, whose ongoing involvement Ader claimed might have hindered Playtech's U.S. market ambitions. In April 2020, Playtech appointed non-executive director Claire Milne as interim chairman after former chair Alan Jackson indicated his intention to step down following the company's 2020 annual general meeting. On May 29, 2020, Playtech agreed to pay £3.5 million to responsible gambling charities following the suicide of 25-year-old Chris Bruney, a customer at the company's TitanBet and Winner gambling sites who lost over £119,000 in the five days prior to his death, during which time he was issued multiple bonuses by managers of the sites’ VIP programs. The
UK Gambling Commission had planned to impose a £3.5 million penalty on Playtech subsidiary PT Entertainment Services after identifying “serious systemic failings in the way PTES managed its social responsibility and anti-money laundering processes” but the company surrendered its UK licenses before the penalty could be imposed. Following media reports of the controversy, Playtech agreed to pay the £3.5 million and chairperson Claire Milne promised to personally apologize to Bruney's family. In August 2020, Playtech began offering online casino games via
Bet365’s New Jersey-licensed website, marking the company's debut in the US regulated online gambling market. In August 2020 Playtech confirmed that it was exploring a potential sale of trading technology division to TradeTech. As part of its divestment of its casual and mobile game sectors, Playtech announced it had sold YoYo Games to
Opera Software in January 2021 for . On 11 October 2021, Playtech announced the partnership with
Holland Casino for the development of their online casino environment. On 18 October 2021,
Aristocrat Leisure announced that it had made an offer to acquire Playtech for US$3.7 billion. The transaction was abandoned nine months later due to challenging market conditions. ==Operations==