Key Points

The Indian government is set to enforce strict regulations on online gaming starting October 1, 2025. Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw announced the comprehensive ban on real-money online games after extensive consultations with industry stakeholders. The legislation marks a significant shift from previous state-level regulations, now applying a uniform national standard. The move reflects the government's proactive approach to digital entertainment governance.

Key Points: Ashwini Vaishnaw Unveils Online Gaming Act Enforcement Date

  • Online real-money games now completely banned nationwide
  • Government conducted extensive stakeholder consultations before implementation
  • Act passed swiftly in Lok Sabha on August 20
  • No bail provisions for game participation violations
2 min read

Online Gaming Act's rules to come into effect from Oct 1: Minister

Union Minister confirms October 1 implementation of Online Games Act, impacting real-money gaming landscape in India

"For almost everything we do, our government believes in a highly consultative process - Ashwini Vaishnaw"

New Delhi, Sep 18

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Thursday said that the rules under the Promotion and Regulation of Online Games Act, 2025, will take effect on October 1.

After the bill was passed by the Parliament, the government resumed talks with stakeholders, such as banks, gaming companies, and other organisations, the minister said.

Vaishnaw said that the government had been in talks with industry stakeholders for almost three years. He emphasised that the government is willing to give additional time if the industry requests it and mentioned that a final round of consultations will take place before implementation starts.

"For almost everything we do, our government believes in a highly consultative process," he stated.

The act, which was notified on August 22, outlaws online real-money games in India, whether they are categorised as skill or chance games.

It is now illegal to offer or take part in such games, and there is no bail.

A major change from previous regulations, which were primarily influenced by state laws and court rulings that distinguished skill-based games from gambling, the legislation was introduced in the Lok Sabha on August 20 and passed in two days.

Earlier on Thursday, the Minister, at a pre-event of the AI Impact Summit 2026, announced that the government will establish over 500 data labs nationwide as part of the 'India AI Mission' to increase artificial intelligence (AI) talent and infrastructure.

He said the initiative is part of the larger IndiaAI mission, and eight new companies, including Tech Mahindra, Fractal Analytics and IIT Bombay consortium Bharatgen, have been selected to build large language models (LLMs).

Under the IndiaAI mission, the government has allocated Rs 988.6 crore to an IIT Bombay-led consortium to build a 1 trillion parameter LLM. In LLMs that extract linguistic relations and patterns from training data, internal variables are called parameters.

The IndiaAI Mission is the Centre's initiative to develop autonomous AI capabilities through sector-specific AI applications, sovereign LLMs, GPUs and capacity projects. 10,300 crore was approved earlier this year.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
But what about fantasy sports? Many consider it skill-based. The blanket ban seems too harsh. Hope they reconsider this aspect 🤔
A
Arjun K
The no-bail provision is concerning. While I support regulation, this seems extreme. People should have legal recourse if wrongly accused.
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Sarah B
Interesting how they're balancing this with AI development initiatives. India needs to focus on constructive tech, not gambling apps. Good priorities!
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Vikram M
Three years of consultation shows they're serious about getting this right. Hope the implementation is smooth and doesn't affect legitimate gaming companies too much.
M
Michael C
The AI mission part is impressive! 500 data labs and 1 trillion parameter LLM - India is really stepping up in the tech race 💪

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