While rivals bled revenue after the e-wallet delinking, one Manila operator grew 30 percent. Its edge was a business model, not a market.
PhilWeb grew first-quarter 2026 revenue 30 percent year-on-year while larger Philippine online gaming rivals reported steep declines. A report by Arden Consult credits its managed services model, where land-based casinos supply the PAGCOR licence and brand while PhilWeb provides the platform. The approach insulated it from the friction that hit consumer-facing operators.
- PhilWeb’s Standout Quarter
- How the Managed Services Model Works
- Why PhilWeb’s Rivals Struggled
- Compliance as a Sales Pitch
- What Comes Next
PhilWeb grew first-quarter 2026 revenue by 30 percent year-on-year, even as larger Philippine online gaming operators posted steep declines. Revenue reached about PHP233.1 million, or US$3.8 million. It was also up 33 percent on the prior quarter. A report by Arden Consult, authored by Diego Cruz, named PhilWeb the clear outlier among four listed operators. The same regulatory squeeze that hammered its rivals barely touched it. The reason was structural: PhilWeb sells the platform, not the player relationship. That distinction turned out to be everything.
PhilWeb’s Standout Quarter
PhilWeb swung firmly into profit during the quarter. EBITDA reached about PHP23 million, or US$375,000, reversing a roughly PHP3 million loss a year earlier. Net income hit about PHP14 million, or US$228,000, against a PHP26 million loss in the prior-year period. The growth engine was its Online e-Gaming Solutions segment. That unit generated about PHP79.3 million, or US$1.3 million, in the quarter. It accounted for roughly 34 percent of group revenue, from essentially nothing a year earlier. According to the report, that segment did not exist as a meaningful contributor twelve months ago. The turnaround was fast and concentrated in the part of the business built for the new regulatory era. The figures come from a report by Arden Consult, which noted the author based the analysis on public disclosures.
How PhilWeb’s Managed Services Model Works
PhilWeb does not run player-facing brands. Instead, land-based casino operators bring the PAGCOR licence, the brand, and the player relationship. PhilWeb supplies the rest: platform technology, game content, customer service, marketing, and operational support. In return, it takes a share of gaming revenue. According to the report, that split keeps PhilWeb one step removed from the consumer touchpoints regulators are squeezing hardest. The company sits in the back end, not the storefront. Its publicly named platform clients include FBM Philippines, Hann Resorts in Clark, Tiger Resort, Newport World Resorts, NUSTAR Online, and PT Gaming. That roster ties PhilWeb to established, licensed land-based names rather than standalone digital brands. As a result, its revenue rides on partners who already hold the regulatory standing and the player base. We mapped the wider operator split in our report on the uneven impact of new rules on Philippine online gaming.
Why PhilWeb’s Rivals Struggled
DigiPlus absorbed the heaviest blow. Its consumer brands BingoPlus, ArenaPlus, and GameZone left it directly exposed to the e-wallet delinking. First-quarter revenue fell 25 percent year-on-year to about PHP17.2 billion, or US$280.4 million. EBITDA dropped 42 percent and net income fell 33 percent. Chairman Eusebio Tanco linked the softness to the delinking’s hit on user activity and transaction flows. Bloomberry, operator of Solaire, posted a net loss of about PHP116 million against a prior-year profit, with VIP rolling chip volume down 39 percent. However, its online platform revenue doubled within the quarter, and it replaced MegaFUNalo! with FUNaloMax in May. DFNN’s fiscal 2025 net loss widened 36 percent to about PHP411 million as costs climbed. In contrast, PhilWeb’s B2B position meant the same rules created demand for exactly what it sells.
Compliance as a Sales Pitch
The rising compliance load is itself driving PhilWeb’s growth. Cruz wrote that the complexity is not a headwind for specialist providers but the sales pitch. New requirements stack up fast: real-time selfie verification, tighter anti-money-laundering monitoring, advertising pre-clearance, supplier accreditation, responsible gaming tools, and possible deposit restrictions. Each adds cost and technical overhead for operators building in-house. For a casino holding a PAGCOR licence but lacking digital infrastructure, outsourcing to a compliant platform becomes the cheaper, faster route. As a result, every new rule strengthens the case for PhilWeb’s model. The friction that shrinks consumer-facing revenue expands the addressable market for back-end providers. Following this logic, regulation that punishes one business model rewards the other. The context behind that regulatory tightening runs through the UK’s parallel push, covered in our piece on the UK Gambling Commission’s burden review.
What Comes Next
Second-quarter earnings are the next signal to watch. According to Arden, 2Q26 results will show whether operator-level recovery is reaching the listed companies. The wider regulatory picture remains unsettled. PAGCOR reported that online gaming transactions fell about 50 percent after the August 2025 delinking. Its monthly income from licensed online gaming gross gaming revenue dropped from around PHP5.7 billion in May 2025 to about PHP2.9 billion by September. That put its PHP60 billion full-year GGR target out of reach. Any reinstatement of e-wallet mini-app access would shift the maths again. So would movement on proposed online gambling bans. For now, PhilWeb’s bet on being the picks-and-shovels supplier is paying off while the consumer-facing market resets.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did PhilWeb outperform its rivals?
PhilWeb outperformed because its managed services model keeps it out of the consumer-facing role hit hardest by new rules. Land-based casinos supply the PAGCOR licence and player base, while PhilWeb provides platform technology for a revenue share. That structure insulated it from the e-wallet delinking that battered DigiPlus and others.
How much did PhilWeb grow in Q1 2026?
PhilWeb grew first-quarter 2026 revenue by 30 percent year-on-year to about PHP233.1 million, or US$3.8 million, and 33 percent quarter-on-quarter. It swung to a net income of roughly PHP14 million from a prior-year loss. Its online gaming segment contributed around 34 percent of group revenue.
What is PhilWeb’s managed services model?
Under PhilWeb’s managed services model, land-based casino operators provide the PAGCOR licence, brand and player-facing operations. PhilWeb supplies the online platform technology, game content, customer service, marketing and operational support in exchange for a share of gaming revenue. Named clients include Hann Resorts, Newport World Resorts and NUSTAR Online.
How did the e-wallet delinking affect the sector?
After the August 2025 delinking of online gaming platforms from in-app e-wallet access, PAGCOR reported online gaming transactions fell about 50 percent. Its monthly online GGR income dropped from around PHP5.7 billion in May 2025 to about PHP2.9 billion by September, putting its full-year target out of reach.
Was the delinking a payments ban?
No, the delinking was not a payments ban. The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas ordered wallet providers like GCash and Maya to remove in-app links to gambling platforms. Players could still fund existing accounts via e-wallets, but had to leave the app and access operator sites directly, adding friction.
What should investors watch next?
Second-quarter 2026 earnings are the key signal, according to Arden Consult, showing whether recovery is reaching listed companies. Regulatory decisions also matter, including any reinstatement of e-wallet mini-app access or movement on proposed online gambling bans, both of which could reshape the operating environment.
This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

