TRUEiGTECH has announced the launch of TIGSweepstakes, a new turnkey software platform for companies that want to operate sweepstakes-style casino products in the US market. The company says the product is designed to support brands with tools such as dual-currency wallets, payment integrations, game access, back-office management, and compliance-related features.
The announcement was made through a paid press release, so the details should be viewed as company-provided information rather than independent performance data. Still, the launch is notable because it comes at a time when the sweepstakes casino industry is facing growing legal pressure in several states, even as technology suppliers continue to build products for operators in the space.
What TRUEiGTECH Says TIGSweepstakes Provides
According to the announcement, TIGSweepstakes is meant to help sweeps operators launch a sweepstakes casino without building the full platform from scratch. The company describes it as a turnkey solution, meaning a business can use pre-built tools for player accounts, site management, payments, currencies, and game content.
TRUEiGTECH says the platform includes support for the common sweepstakes casino model, where players use one currency for standard play and another currency that may be connected to prize redemptions. The company also highlights features such as Gold Coins, Sweeps Coins, AMOE support, identity checks, age verification, and redemption management.
The release also claims the platform can support large game libraries, multiple providers, and a wide range of payment options. However, these are company claims from the launch announcement, and operators would still need to review the platform, legal structure, and technical setup before relying on those features.
The company also says the platform can help brands launch in around four weeks. That kind of timeline may appeal to operators looking to enter the market quickly, but actual launch timing would likely depend on customization, legal review, payment setup, testing, and state-by-state compliance work.
Why the Launch Matters Now
The launch comes during a complicated period for sweepstakes casinos. Some states have passed bans or moved bills forward, while others have given regulators more power to act against unlicensed gambling-style platforms. That has created uncertainty for operators using dual-currency models.
At the same time, the business-to-business side of the industry is still active. Platform providers, game suppliers, payment companies, and marketing partners continue to see demand from brands that want to offer sweepstakes-style products in states where the model remains available.
That is why the TIGSweepstakes launch is worth watching. It suggests some suppliers still see room for growth, even as the legal environment becomes more difficult. For operators, a turnkey platform could reduce development time and make it easier to test a new brand. But it does not remove the need for legal advice, compliance planning, or careful state-by-state review.
The press release presents compliance tools as a key part of the product. That is important because regulators often raise questions about age checks, identity verification, responsible play, redemptions, AMOE rules, and how sweepstakes operators market their products.
What This Means for the Sweepstakes Market
For players, TIGSweepstakes does not mean a new consumer-facing casino is automatically live. It is a software platform aimed at operators, not a single sweepstakes casino brand. Players may never interact with the TIGSweepstakes name directly, even if future brands use its technology in the background.
For operators, the platform adds another option in a crowded and fast-changing supplier market. A company looking to launch a sweepstakes casino may compare products like this based on game access, wallet tools, payment support, player management, reporting, and legal flexibility.
For the wider industry, the launch shows the split in the current sweepstakes casino market. On one side, lawmakers and regulators are putting more pressure on dual-currency gaming. On the other side, software providers are still building tools for operators that believe the model has room to grow.
The key question is whether platforms like TIGSweepstakes can help operators adapt to a market that is becoming more restricted and more closely watched. For now, TRUEiGTECH’s announcement is another sign that the sweepstakes casino sector is still attracting supplier interest, even as the legal debate continues.
