BGaming Adds Daily Quests Missions to Its Games
BGaming has introduced a new player retention tool: Quests. It is a system of daily missions inside the studio’s games, with the focus placed not on competition between users, but on each player’s personal progress.
The mechanic looks simple: the player receives three daily missions and gradually completes them while playing. Tasks can vary: playing through a certain number of spins, placing the required number of bets, using Buy Bonus, reaching specified multipliers, or building up their cumulative value.
Players receive coins for completing missions. Rewards are also credited not only at the final point, but at intermediate stages of progress as well. This makes the system more engaging: the player sees movement along the progress bar and receives small incentives even before fully completing the task.
Accumulated coins can be exchanged for cash prizes. Under the stated mechanic, winnings are credited automatically to the account with no additional conditions. This is an important detail, because many promotional tools in iGaming lose their appeal precisely at the wagering stage, because of hidden restrictions or complicated reward delivery.
Quests fits neatly into the current trend toward slot gamification. Providers are increasingly layering additional goals, progress bars, missions, and rewards on top of regular gameplay, so the player is not just spinning the reels but can see the short path to the next bonus. BGaming’s approach does this without leaderboards or a race against other users; the format feels more like personal daily tasks.
For operators, this kind of tool can be useful as a soft way to retain an audience. The player does not need to enter a tournament or wait for a major promotion: missions refresh daily, progress is clear right away, and the reward is tied to activity in the studio’s games.
Daily quests, missions, streaks, coins, milestones… casino games are starting to look suspiciously like mobile games. The industry keeps calling it “player engagement,” but most players would probably call it “finding new ways to keep us logging in every day.”