3 Oaks Gaming to launch slots in Peru after receiving Mincetur registration
Islots developer 3 Oaks Gaming has secured registration from Peru’s gambling regulator, Mincetur, expanding further into Latin America.
3 Oaks Gaming can supply 56 of its titles to the regulated market through Peru-licensed operators.
Through its entry into Peru, 3 Oaks is continuing to strengthen its presence throughout various regulated markets. Additionally, by entering the market through Peru-licensed operators, the partnership will continue to support operators with localized content designed to fit player preferences in each region.
“Peru is one of the most dynamic regulated markets in Latin America, and achieving registration here significantly enhances our regional footprint,” Krasimir Pankovski, Head of Sales at 3 Oaks Gaming, said in a news release.
In October, 3 Oaks expanded its presence in Brazil by partnering with local operator Aposta Ganha, which added three of its slot titles onto the platform, including 3 China Pots, 3 Hot Chillies, and Coin Volcano.
The partnership followed 3 Oaks Gaming receiving approval to operate in Brazil in early 2025.
Abi Bray brings strong researching skills to the forefront of all of her writing, whether it’s the newest slots, industry trends or the ever changing legislation across the U.S, Asia and Australia, she maintains a keen eye for detail and a passion for reporting.
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The Backstory
Why Peru is the next stop in a Latin America push
The Mincetur registration opens a new channel for 3 Oaks Gaming to distribute dozens of slot titles through Peru-licensed operators, a step that fits a broader pattern across Latin America. The supplier has been amassing approvals and partnerships in the region to seed demand and secure footholds as regulated frameworks mature. In parallel, infrastructure players and platform providers are moving into Peru, sharpening the market’s appeal for content companies seeking scale.
Peru’s audience is already being targeted by payments firms and back-end vendors that enable compliance, retention and monetization. That groundwork matters for a slot specialist betting on a fast start. It helps explain why 3 Oaks is moving quickly after clearing regulatory thresholds: the rails are being laid for distribution, payments and engagement, which reduces execution risk and accelerates time to revenue.
The company’s regional playbook became clearer over the past year as it prioritized early regulatory access, then leveraged local operator alliances to seed content and refine portfolios for each jurisdiction. With Peru now in the mix, 3 Oaks can cross-promote proven titles and iterate on localization as neighboring markets evolve.
Brazil set the tone for scale and urgency
3 Oaks’ expansion cadence was anchored by Brazil, where it obtained approval from the Secretariat of Prizes and Bets to offer games in the country’s regulated online market. That authorization, detailed in a report on Brazil’s licensing of 3 Oaks Gaming, opened access to major operators and put marquee titles such as Coin Volcano and 3 Hot Chillies on local platforms. The company framed Brazil as its number one target because of audience size and growth velocity following the Jan. 1, 2025 go-live.
The Brazil approval also aligned with the regulator’s plan to tighten oversight of suppliers and curb unlicensed advertising. As coverage of Brazil’s provider registration initiative showed, officials moved to certify B2B providers and coordinate with social platforms to limit offshore marketing, while weighing stricter ad rules for newly licensed operators. Those steps give compliant vendors a cleaner runway by narrowing gray-market competition and clarifying expectations for product and marketing conduct.
For 3 Oaks, being on the right side of that line has commercial and strategic value: it strengthens operator trust, unlocks distribution in a crowded field and positions the supplier to adapt quickly as guidance evolves. The focus on regulatory alignment is now carrying over to neighboring Peru, which has been rolling out its own compliance prerequisites for technology and content suppliers.
Operator deals translate approvals into audience
Licensing alone does not guarantee reach. 3 Oaks has paired certifications with distribution partners that understand local preferences and can promote titles effectively. In Brazil, the company followed its approval with a content agreement with Aposta Ganha. The operator added a slate of 3 Oaks games, including legacy performers and newer releases, as outlined in the Aposta Ganha partnership announcement. The deal gave 3 Oaks immediate shelf space with a domestic brand focused on responsible gaming within the regulatory framework.
That approach—secure entry, then lock in local distribution—mirrors the strategy 3 Oaks has used across Latin America. The supplier had already gone live in Colombia and Mexico with multiple operators, experience the company cited while sizing Brazil’s potential. The playbook is straightforward but effective: use operator reach to test engagement, tailor content to regional tastes and iterate on features that drive retention, such as hold-and-win mechanics and localized theming.
Peru offers similar dynamics. Market access via licensed operators means 3 Oaks can seed popular titles while tuning volatility, bonus cadence and UX for local players. The company’s claim that it will offer localized content fits with how it scaled in Brazil, where early traction with headline titles created brand familiarity that can be leveraged across borders.
Peru’s tech stack is forming as vendors pile in
While 3 Oaks focuses on content, other suppliers are setting up the tools that keep players engaged and operators compliant in Peru. Softswiss secured certification for its Jackpot Aggregator to launch in the country after testing by Gaming Laboratories International. The entry, detailed in coverage of Softswiss’ Peru certification, gives operators a configurable jackpot engine that supports multi-level prizes and branded jackpots across casino and sportsbook. These mechanics have become standard retention levers in competitive markets, often lifting session length and cross-sell.
Softswiss also advanced in Brazil earlier this year, licensing its Game Aggregator and Jackpot Aggregator for that market. The cross-market push signals that large infrastructure providers see contiguous opportunities in Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Latin America. For content companies like 3 Oaks, the presence of such tooling in Peru means operators can plug in jackpots and promotions that amplify the appeal of new titles without custom builds.
The availability of tested engagement tech reduces friction for launches. Operators can bundle fresh content with jackpot overlays and targeted campaigns, making it easier to introduce new suppliers. That environment favors vendors arriving with a ready portfolio and a plan to localize.
Payments readiness lowers adoption barriers
Payments are also catching up with demand in Peru, a factor that supports conversion for real-money gaming. Paysafe is transforming its eCash brand PagoEfectivo into a digital wallet with instant loading, P2P transfers and code-based payments. The move, detailed in coverage of PagoEfectivo’s wallet launch, is the group’s first digital wallet in Latin America. Paysafe said most surveyed Peruvian consumers would use a wallet from the brand, suggesting a ready base for merchants including igaming operators.
Payments convenience shapes churn and lifetime value. If deposit and withdrawal flows are quick and familiar, new content providers face fewer drop-offs at onboarding. For 3 Oaks, which relies on operator partners for cashier execution, the spread of a trusted wallet can lift conversion rates on campaigns that introduce new titles to Peruvian players.
The wallet expansion follows Paysafe’s own entry into Brazil’s regulated market, another sign that payments firms are moving in lockstep with gaming regulation. As more providers standardize around vetted payment rails, it becomes easier for content companies to forecast returns and for regulators to monitor flows.
The stakes as regulation tightens and markets mature
Latin America’s igaming markets are converging toward tighter oversight and clearer supplier on-ramps. Brazil’s move to register B2B providers, highlighted in the regulator’s registration plans, underscores a regional trend toward formal certification, limits on offshore activity and stricter marketing rules. Peru’s acceptance of certified engagement tools and payments solutions indicates a similar preference for vetted participants.
For 3 Oaks, the combination of approvals, operator alliances and supporting infrastructure sets a favorable stage in Peru, but it also raises the bar. As dozens of brands launch across the region, titles must stand out on mechanics and localization rather than novelty alone. Success will hinge on how quickly the supplier adapts content to local tastes, integrates with jackpot systems and participates in responsible marketing standards that regulators are sharpening.
The company’s Brazil experience—securing certification, then converting with local partners such as Aposta Ganha—offers a template for Peru. With foundational pieces in place, the next phase will test whether 3 Oaks can translate regulatory momentum into sustained player engagement in a market where payments, jackpots and compliance are already aligning.








