TCS John Huxley has entered the interactive gaming industry with the signing of an agreement with EveryMatrix.

The exclusive agreement provides the global land-based casino market (excluding North America) with EveryMatrix products through TCS John Huxley, who will provide additional advisory, front-end web development and ongoing support services.

EveryMatrix is an independent software development company providing world class gaming products for the i-gaming industry. Its unique CasinoEngine product is the only casino aggregator offering a seamless wallet and back-office. Players get access to more than 1,500 games from top casino vendors with live dealer options and the unique benefit of negotiating only one contract with TCS JH instead of separate contracts with the various casino vendors.

Cath Burns, TCS John Huxley group CEO, said: “Operators globally are increasingly asking us to provide them with interactive solutions. As a trusted partner providing casinos with complete live gaming solutions, we are now well positioned to deliver what the casino operator needs to launch a compelling interactive offering from a market proven platform.”

Heading up the new Interactive Division will be group business development director Jonathan Pettemerides. He said: “When selecting our interactive technology partner, we’ve had the player in mind throughout. EveryMatrix has successfully integrated the widest selection of casino content from the best online and traditional vendors. The back-end system will allow our casino clients to control their online and mobile offerings as they would their traditional gaming floor.

Ebbe Groes, CEO of EveryMatrix, added: “Our premium, award-winning solutions have so far been exclusive to highly-experienced or extremely ambitious operators, forward-thinking entrepreneurs who had online gaming at the core of their business.

“This new partnership with TCS John Huxley will give more operators access to our innovative solutions, allowing even long-standing businesses to stay ahead of the game instead of playing catch-up.”