Casino operators and governments around the world are recalibrating strategies for land-based gaming as a flurry of developments this year highlights diverging fortunes across markets – from Japan’s landmark integrated resort construction to softening revenue in Las Vegas and regulatory pressure in Asia.
Japan’s IR era begins as MGM Osaka breaks ground
Construction officially began April 24, 2025, on MGM Osaka’s integrated resort on Yumeshima island, marking the first concrete step in Japan’s long-awaited rollout of licensed casino resorts. The JPY1.27 trillion (roughly $8.9 billion) project, a partnership between MGM Resorts and Orix Corporation, will feature hotels, convention space and a casino complex slated to open around 2030. Local officials and developers highlighted the resort’s strategic placement adjacent to the Expo 2025 site as a bid to turbocharge inbound tourism and conventions, positioning Japan to challenge established regional hubs such as Macau and Singapore.
Industry executives say the Osaka project is emblematic of a broader pivot in land-based gaming – operators are packaging casinos inside destination resorts focused on family attractions, conventions and entertainment rather than relying solely on gambling revenue.
Las Vegas and U.S. tribal projects show mixed signals
Back in the United States, the industry’s flagship market signaled headwinds in late October 2025 when MGM Resorts reported weaker-than-expected third-quarter results, with Las Vegas revenue down 7% year-on-year amid room renovations, lower RevPAR and reduced table-game hold percentages. MGM’s CFO Jonathan Halkyard said the company still sees “signs of recovery” tied to conventions and finished renovations, but the earnings shortfall sent shares lower and underscored how cyclical pressures and rising operating costs can dent Strip performance. Recent boutique and rebranding projects – including announced renovations and celebrity-led hotel concepts – suggest operators are betting that refreshed amenities will recapture high-value leisure and business travelers.
Meanwhile, tribal gaming continues to reshape local landscapes. Several high-profile proposals in California and elsewhere have stirred legal and political battles over land-in-trust decisions and market competition. These disputes highlight friction between tribal sovereignty, state officials and competing tribes when new large-scale projects are proposed on purchased or newly trust-land parcels.
Regulatory scrutiny and reinvestment in Asia-Pacific
Across Asia, regulators are leaning more heavily on operators to demonstrate wider social and economic value. In Singapore, Resorts World Sentosa’s multi-billion-dollar reinvestment program and a truncated license renewal in late 2024 have led the operator to accelerate investment in non-gaming attractions as the city-state reassesses casino licenses ahead of 2026 reviews. The dual pressure of regulatory oversight and post-pandemic tourism recovery is pushing integrated resorts to prioritize attractions, new shows and family-friendly draws.
What to watch next
The sector will be closely watched over the coming months for several key signals: the pace of construction and regulatory approvals for Japan’s IR pipeline; quarterly results from major operators that will indicate whether Las Vegas’s recent weakness is transitory; outcomes of U.S. land-into-trust decisions that shape tribal gaming expansion; and license reviews in Singapore and other jurisdictions that could redefine the balance between gaming and non-gaming revenue strategies. Market observers say operators that can integrate large-scale entertainment, convention capacity and diversified revenue streams are likeliest to thrive as land-based casinos evolve into multipurpose destination resorts.
