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Fastly Blog

Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Fastly Six Common Live Streaming Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them) How Fastly and Skyfire Enable Trusted Agentic Commerce at the Edge Bot Defense is Table Stakes. Machine Traffic Requires a Business Strategy AI Traffic Grew 6.5x Faster Than Human Traffic This Year Python SDK Beta: How the Language of AI Runs Faster and Safer with Fastly Give AI Agents the Markdown They Actually Want How to Configure Local Logging for an On-Prem Next-Gen WAF Agent Accountability Without Control Is Breaking Security Leadership Fastly Joins the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) to Guide Edge AI Interoperability The E-commerce Industry in the AI Era: Has the Agentic Flood Hit? No Margin for Error: What the FIFA World Cup Teaches Us About Performance at the Edge The Publishing Industry in the AI Era: Why Bot Strategy is Now a Business Strategy Bad Performance Kills SaaS/PaaS Growth — Why Your CDN Matters Why your code is safe from Copy Fail on Fastly Compute Myth or Marvel: Claude Mythos and What it Means for Security Introducing Compliance Audit Reports Supporting Google Private AI Compute with Privacy-Preserving Edge Infrastructure Fastly Nearly Half the Web Isn’t Human: Inside Fastly’s Threat Insight Report Media over QUIC: Can Streaming Finally Have Both Scale and Low Latency? Introducing Fastly’s Redesigned Homepage: Your Central Hub for Actionable Insights The False Choice of Indiscriminate Blocking: Why Technical Precision is the New Standard for an Open Internet What is CVE-2026-23869? React Server Components Security Alert Fastly enables first-party tagging for Google Advertisers Shrink Your Bill With Efficient Software Your AI coding agent just got better at Fastly Fastly Ranked as a Leader in the 2026 Forrester Wave™ for Edge Development Platforms Fastly at RSAC 2026: New Advances in AppSec, Bot Management, and Deception Mastering the Edge: What Golf Can Teach Us About Speed, Precision, and Performance Real-Time CDN Monitoring for Live Events with Bronto Imperva Alternatives Fastly + Scalepost: Extending the Fastly platform to manage AI Crawlers Best content delivery networks for bot management Vibe Shift? Senior Developers Ship nearly 2.5x more AI Code than Junior Counterparts Maximizing Compute Performance with Log Explorer & Insights Fastly CDN Expands Scaling Fastly Network: Balancing Requests | Fastly Best Practices for Multi-CDN Implementations | Fastly Compute@Edge: Serverless Insights by Company | Fastly Fastly can teach you about the Wasm future in just 6 talks Fastly's Observability Unleashed: New Updates and Insights Optimizing your multi-CDN infrastructure to improve performance Stay ahead of attackers by pushing your security perimeter to the edge Are APIs the Key to Digital Innovation or a Trojan Horse? Fastly Academy: on-demand learning at your fingertips. | Fastly 30 Years of Web: Building for Tomorrow 4 Ways Legacy WAF Fails to Protect Your Apps Adobe boosts performance and MTTR with Epsagon and Fastly logs | Fastly Beta" A New Serverless Compute Environment Early TLS at Fastly Technical trainings & the future of edge delivery at Altitude 2016: a year in review Innovation Capacity Defined: Tech Stack Values | Fastly Deep Log Visibility Offered by Logentries | Fastly Caching the Uncacheable: CSRF Security Increase Your Hit Ratio With This Simple Tip
Why iGaming Infrastructure is Breaking and What Comes Next
Ashley Hurwitz, John Agger · 2026-05-12 · via Fastly Blog

The iGaming industry is growing quickly – but the bigger story is happening behind the scenes.

Live, in-play betting now makes up more than half of all wagers and continues to grow. Mobile has become the dominant channel. And global expansion, especially in newly regulated markets like the United States, is accelerating competition. The result? Altogether, the iGaming market is projected to approach $170 billion by 2031.

That growth isn’t just adding users. It’s changing what platforms are expected to do.

iGaming is no longer about reliably delivering content. It’s about processing bets, updating odds, enforcing rules, and stopping threats – all in real time.

And that’s where strain starts to show.

Real-time Betting Changed the Game

Every live bet is time-sensitive.

Odds shift continuously. Scores update in seconds. And users expect everything from placing a bet to getting the confirmation, to happen instantly. Sub-150ms responsiveness is quickly becoming the baseline. 

Instant bets have long been the holy grail of iGaming. The ability to place a wager on the very next moment of action - who scores the next three-pointer, whether a penalty kick is missed, or if the next play results in a touchdown - fundamentally changes how fans engage with live sports. Instead of waiting hours for an outcome, bettors receive immediate feedback and instant gratification, creating a far more dynamic and addictive experience. 

This shortens the engagement loop dramatically, increases betting frequency, and keeps users continuously invested throughout the event. As operators compete for retention and differentiation, the platforms capable of supporting real-time data processing, ultra-low latency delivery, and rapid odds updates will be best positioned to capitalize on the next wave of iGaming adoption.

On the other hand, when performance slips, the impact is immediate. Bets are abandoned. Trust erodes. And revenue follows suit. This isn’t just about speed, it’s about keeping the experience reliable when timing is part of the product.

Pressure From Every Angle

At the same time, operators are dealing with challenges that don’t sit neatly together.

Traffic that doesn’t ramp – it spikes. Major events can drive global demand in seconds. Systems need to scale just as quickly or risk downtime at the most valuable moments.

Threats that target revenue directly. DDoS attacks, credential stuffing, and automated betting activity are constant. These attacks are often timed to coincide with peak traffic times, when disruption is most costly.

Regulation that varies by region. Operators have to enforce geo restrictions, data residency requirements, and fraud controls across jurisdictions – while preventing VPN-based workarounds and maintaining a seamless user experience.

Individually, these are solvable problems. Together, they create operational friction.

Where the Current Approach Falls Short

To keep up, many teams have added more tooling: CDNs for delivery, WAF for security, separate systems for bots, logging, failover, and so on. 

The result is a fragmented, but functioning (for now) stack.

Different control planes. Limited visibility across systems. Slower response when something goes wrong. Manual processes where automation is needed most.

Traditional CDNs, in particular, weren’t designed for this kind of workload. They handle static delivery well, but struggle when every request is dynamic, time-sensitive, and tied to a transaction.

The bigger issue is architectural. When performance, security, and application logic are handled in separate layers, every decision takes longer. Requests travel further. Systems depend on coordination between tools that weren’t built to operate in real-time. 

That model starts to break down under the demands of live betting.

Why a New Approach is Emerging

To support real-time betting at scale, operators need to reduce both latency and complexity – at the same time.

That’s difficult to do when critical functions are split across multiple systems. Instead, more operators are shifting toward a model where those functions run closer together and closer to the user.

This is where the Edge comes in.

Instead of sending every request back to centralized infrastructure, operators are moving logic, security, and decision-making closer to users.

That shift makes it possible to:

  • Validate bets near the point of interaction

  • Update odds globally without delay

  • Block malicious traffic before it reaches origin

  • Enforce geo and compliance rules in real-time

It’s not just about moving the data faster. It’s about removing the friction introduced by distributed, disconnected systems.

What the Edge Enables for iGaming Platforms

The impact shows up in how platforms perform under pressure.

  • Faster gameplay: Odds updates and bet confirmations happen without unnecessary round trips, keeping pace with live events and reducing the chance of dropped or delayed bets.

  • Stronger protection without added latency: Threats are handled at the edge, so mitigation happens in real-time without slowing down legitimate users.

  • Resilience during peaks: Traffic spikes can be absorbed without overwhelming backend systems, even during major sporting events.

  • Better visibility: Teams can see what happens, when it happens, making it easier to catch and resolve issues before they escalate.

  • Simpler compliance: Geo restrictions and routing decisions can be enforced immediately, without adding operational overhead or user friction.

Taken together, these capabilities make it easier to deliver the kind of fast, reliable experience that real-time betting depends on.

Building for What’s Next

Platforms like Fastly’s are built for this shift, combining delivery, security, observability, and resilience into a single edge platform.

That allows operators to improve performance, run logic closer to users, and mitigate threats without adding latency – all while simplifying how their systems are managed. 

Learn how Fastly helps iGaming platforms deliver faster, more resilient experiences — and see what a modern edge architecture looks like in practice.