Certified Gaming Regulatory Specialist (CGRS)

$900.00

Built around 15 progressive modules, the Certified Gaming Regulatory Specialist (CGRS) provides a comprehensive framework for understanding how gaming regulation operates in practice across land-based casino, iGaming, and multi-channel gaming environments.

The program is structured to reflect the full regulatory lifecycle, beginning with the role, mandate, independence, and legal authority of the gaming regulator before moving into licensing, suitability, risk-based supervision, compliance monitoring, inspections, AML and financial crime oversight, responsible gaming, and player protection. From there, learners examine the operational realities regulators must understand, including table games, slot machines, electronic gaming systems, iGaming platforms, casino cage operations, surveillance, security, and internal controls.

This 15-module structure ensures that learners do not view regulatory functions as isolated activities. Licensing, supervision, inspections, enforcement, responsible gaming, AML oversight, operational integrity, data analytics, and institutional governance are presented as interconnected parts of a single public-interest oversight system. The result is a learning journey that connects legal powers, regulatory judgment, operational knowledge, and evidence-based decision-making.

The CGRS is designed to strengthen the practical capability of regulators and regulatory professionals. It emphasizes how to assess risk, interpret information, document findings, escalate concerns, evaluate operator controls, and make decisions that are proportionate, transparent, and defensible. By focusing on both day-to-day regulatory practice and long-term institutional resilience, the program prepares learners to contribute to gaming oversight that is lawful, consistent, intelligence-led, and trusted.

Built around 15 progressive modules, the Certified Gaming Regulatory Specialist (CGRS) provides a comprehensive framework for understanding how gaming regulation operates in practice across land-based casino, iGaming, and multi-channel gaming environments.

The program is structured to reflect the full regulatory lifecycle, beginning with the role, mandate, independence, and legal authority of the gaming regulator before moving into licensing, suitability, risk-based supervision, compliance monitoring, inspections, AML and financial crime oversight, responsible gaming, and player protection. From there, learners examine the operational realities regulators must understand, including table games, slot machines, electronic gaming systems, iGaming platforms, casino cage operations, surveillance, security, and internal controls.

This 15-module structure ensures that learners do not view regulatory functions as isolated activities. Licensing, supervision, inspections, enforcement, responsible gaming, AML oversight, operational integrity, data analytics, and institutional governance are presented as interconnected parts of a single public-interest oversight system. The result is a learning journey that connects legal powers, regulatory judgment, operational knowledge, and evidence-based decision-making.

The CGRS is designed to strengthen the practical capability of regulators and regulatory professionals. It emphasizes how to assess risk, interpret information, document findings, escalate concerns, evaluate operator controls, and make decisions that are proportionate, transparent, and defensible. By focusing on both day-to-day regulatory practice and long-term institutional resilience, the program prepares learners to contribute to gaming oversight that is lawful, consistent, intelligence-led, and trusted.