A tented casino opened this month in Petersburg, Virginia, as U.S. regional developers accelerate rollouts while global gaming hubs press ahead with regulatory reform and consolidation that is reshaping where and how people gamble in person.
U.S. regional expansion pushes faster openings
On January 22, 2026, Live! Casino Virginia launched a temporary, tented gaming floor in Petersburg to begin operations ahead of a planned permanent resort slated for 2027. Developed by The Cordish Companies with local partners, the venue – positioned to serve Richmond-area customers – is the latest example of U.S. operators using interim facilities to begin generating revenue and local tax receipts while larger integrated resorts are built. Operators across several states have increasingly favored this approach since 2022 as municipalities and regulators look for near-term economic benefits even as full-scale projects undergo lengthy permitting and construction.
Industry executives say temporary openings help operators test markets, build customer databases and smooth regulatory transitions. At the same time, state regulators are refining rules on things like complimentary alcohol, self-exclusion enforcement and local impact fees to ensure responsible rollout of new brick-and-mortar gaming.
Macau’s reconstruction accelerates – satellite closures, junket limits
Across the Pacific, Macau’s casino sector remains in active restructuring under laws enacted since 2022. The Macao SAR Government has required casino concessionaires to wind down “satellite casinos” by the end of 2025, a process that continued to affect staffing and property portfolios into early 2026. Regulators have also preserved a cap on licensed gaming promoters (junkets) for 2026, keeping the maximum at 50 and maintaining individual limits for each concessionaire. Those measures follow rules that restrict junkets’ roles – including limits on revenue sharing and a prohibition on issuing gambling credit – as Macau seeks to rebalance its VIP and mass-market mix and tighten oversight of third-party operators.
Macau’s consolidation is reshaping operator strategies: companies are redeploying equipment and personnel back to main integrated resorts, accelerating investment in non-gaming amenities, and betting on mass-market growth and slot play to offset shrinking VIP volumes.
What industry watchers are tracking next
Analysts are watching several near-term signals. In Macau, banks and broker notes expect mass and slot segments to drive modest GGR growth in 2026 even as VIP revenue faces pressure from tighter regulations and a high comparison base. In the U.S., the effectiveness of temporary venues at sustaining customer demand through the transition to permanent resorts – and how state regulators manage revenue flows and consumer protections during that period – will help determine whether the tent-and-temporary model becomes commonplace for future projects.
Operators themselves cite two priorities: optimizing short-term cash flow without undermining long-term resort branding, and adapting to regulatory shifts in mature markets like Macau where authorities continue to mandate closures and workforce transitions. For communities, the balance between immediate economic boosts and the social costs of expanded gambling remains a central debate.
Watch for announcements of permanent resort timelines from U.S. developers planning multi-phase openings, and for Macau regulator updates on remaining satellite closures and junket licensing in the coming weeks; those developments will further clarify how land-based casinos evolve in an era of tighter supervision and competitive repositioning. For Macau regulatory details, see the Macao SAR Government announcement on the satellite casino transition: Macao SAR Government statement.
