Live Casino Jobs in iGaming

Live casino is the fastest-grown vertical in iGaming, built around physical studios where dealers run blackjack, roulette, baccarat, and game shows streamed to players in real time. The hiring range is unusually wide: game presenters and dealers on the studio floor, pit bosses and shufflers, studio operations managers, broadcast and OCR engineers keeping card recognition and video pipelines running, and product teams designing new show formats.

Major studios operate from Malta, Latvia, Georgia, and the Philippines, running 24/7 shift patterns. Presenter roles need camera presence and language skills more than gambling knowledge, and operators train from scratch. Studio hubs overlap with Malta-based roles, while product and engineering positions are often hybrid.

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Frequently asked questions

Do live casino dealers need prior casino experience?
Usually not. Studios run academies that teach dealing, game rules, and presentation over a few weeks, and they hire primarily for camera confidence, clear speech, and language coverage. Native-level fluency in an in-demand language is often the deciding factor.
What does a studio operations manager do?
They run the physical studio: shift scheduling for dealers across 24/7 tables, uptime and table availability targets, equipment and uniform standards, and coordination with broadcast engineering. It is closer to running a TV production floor than a traditional casino pit.
What technology roles exist in live casino?
Studios employ broadcast engineers for cameras and encoding, OCR specialists for card and wheel recognition, and platform engineers for the game logic and video delivery stack. Latency is the enemy, so networking and streaming expertise is highly valued.