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Colombia Launches Regulated Keno with Blockchain Tickets

colombia launches regulated keno with blockchain tickets

colombia launches regulated keno with blockchain tickets

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Colombia just added a brand-new regulated gambling vertical — and it didn’t do it quietly. Keno went live nationwide on 1 April 2026, and Coljuegos is positioning it as both a revenue engine for public healthcare and a technology upgrade for trust. The game is operated by four concessionaires, sold through 26,000+ terminals across all 32 departments, and built around blockchain-based ticket issuance to strengthen traceability and reduce fraud risk. If you’re an operator, supplier, or investor in LatAm, this is the kind of launch you study because it blends three trends regulators love: channelization away from illegal play, continuous high-frequency draws, and auditable digital rails. Here’s what’s launching, why blockchain matters here, and whether a Colombia license helps you internationally (spoiler: it helps in credibility—but it doesn’t travel as a legal passport). Key points

Colombia’s Regulated Keno Goes Live — and Blockchain Ticketing Is the Headline Feature

What exactly launched on 1 April 2026 Coljuegos confirmed that Keno officially began operations nationwide on 1 April 2026, with projected contributions of roughly COP 500 billion to Colombia’s subsidized health system over the next five years. The regulator also projected Keno could generate sales exceeding COP 2.3 trillion over that same period—numbers that explain why the government wanted this vertical pulled out of the shadows and into the legal market. Coljuegos President Marco Emilio Hincapié framed it as a “market expansion + public benefit” moment, highlighting prize potential and the public health transfer model that underpins Colombia’s gambling monopoly framework.

Who operates Keno in Colombia (and why it’s structured this way)

Coljuegos didn’t hand this product to one national operator. Instead, it conceded the game across four geographic regions, each run by a separate operator—an approach designed to support coverage, retail rollout, and competitive performance standards. Coljuegos’ concession announcement lists the operators as: Region 1: Operador Regional de Keno S.A.S. Region 2: Costa Operador Keno S.A.S. Region 3: Keno Región 3 S.A.S. Region 4: Blinkazar S.A.S. From a compliance and monitoring angle, this structure is smart: it avoids a single point of failure, and it makes it easier for Coljuegos to benchmark performance and enforce concession terms region-by-region.

How the game works (player-facing mechanics)

Coljuegos’ launch bulletin and industry reporting converge on a simple, fast loop: Coljuegos also highlighted an initial headline prize figure (marketed up to COP 2.4 billion in early communications), which is classic “launch fuel” for a new mass-market draw product.

Why blockchain ticket issuance matters (and what it’s actually doing)

Let’s be precise: Colombia isn’t launching “crypto gambling.” It’s using blockchain as an audit layer for ticket issuance—so transactions become more verifiable and traceable. Coljuegos explicitly stated that Keno will be one of the first games in Latin America to use blockchain technology in ticket issuance, positioned as a player-security and integrity upgrade. Even more importantly, Coljuegos baked blockchain into the operational requirements: the 2025 tender documentation states that operators must have a central game system integrated with blockchain for ticket issuance, alongside RNG, communications, streaming infrastructure, and sufficient terminal coverage. My take: this is a regulator learning from the real world. Keno has historically been vulnerable to integrity concerns in informal markets (ticket manipulation, duplicate codes, unverifiable sales). A traceable issuance layer makes it harder to “ghost” tickets or dispute transaction records after the fact.

The real objective: convert illegal play into regulated revenue for healthcare

Coljuegos and multiple reports emphasize that Keno has been offered illegally in Colombia for years. Regulation here is about channelization—moving demand into a supervised product where the state can enforce standards and collect monopoly rents for health funding. Coljuegos’ 2025 procurement note also explains the funding mechanics: operators pay 15%–17% of sales as exploitation rights plus 1% for administration expenses—directly tying performance to public transfers. That is the “Colombia model” in one line: legal gambling exists because it funds social priorities, especially healthcare.

Are Colombia’s licenses relevant internationally?

This is where a lot of executives get overly optimistic. What a Coljuegos concession does internationally What it does not do internationally My opinion: treat a Colombia license as a “trust asset,” not a “passport.”

Conclusion

Colombia is doing something strategically smart: it’s taking a historically illegal, high-frequency product and re-launching it inside a regulated model that funds healthcare while upgrading integrity through traceable issuance. And the headline is simple: Colombia’s new regulated gambling offering is one of the first in Latin America to use blockchain technology for ticket issuance.

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Let’s keep the conversation going! Tags: Colombia, Coljuegos, Keno, Lottery, Blockchain, Regulation, LATAM iGaming, Retail terminals, Responsible gambling, Compliance

The post Colombia Launches Regulated Keno with Blockchain Tickets appeared first on Gamingo News.

Colombia just added a brand-new regulated gambling vertical — and it didn’t do it quietly. Keno went live nationwide on 1 April 2026, and Coljuegos is positioning it as both a revenue engine for public healthcare and a technology upgrade for trust. The game is operated by four concessionaires, sold through 26,000+ terminals across all The post Colombia Launches Regulated Keno with Blockchain Tickets appeared first on Gamingo News. 
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