
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Parliament last month enacted the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025, establishing a comprehensive legal framework for India’s rapidly expanding online gaming sector. The legislation, which received the President’s assent on August 22, seeks to regulate segments such as e-sports and social gaming, while simultaneously imposing a blanket prohibition on all money-based online games.
The stated rationale for this prohibition is the “serious social, financial, psychological and public health harms, particularly among young individuals and economically disadvantaged groups,” associated with real-money gaming.
Even before the law has taken effect, several petitions have been filed in the Karnataka High Court challenging its validity. The Court has issued notice to the Union government on an interim plea seeking a stay on the Act’s application to online games of skill.
Can the new legislation withstand constitutional scrutiny? What are its broader implications? Does it run contrary to established judicial precedents that distinguish between games of skill and games of chance?
Guest: Deepak Joshi, Advocate-On-Record at the Supreme Court of India
Host: Aaratrika Bhaumik
Shot, produced, and edited by Jude Francis Weston
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
4.5
3737 ratings
Parliament last month enacted the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025, establishing a comprehensive legal framework for India’s rapidly expanding online gaming sector. The legislation, which received the President’s assent on August 22, seeks to regulate segments such as e-sports and social gaming, while simultaneously imposing a blanket prohibition on all money-based online games.
The stated rationale for this prohibition is the “serious social, financial, psychological and public health harms, particularly among young individuals and economically disadvantaged groups,” associated with real-money gaming.
Even before the law has taken effect, several petitions have been filed in the Karnataka High Court challenging its validity. The Court has issued notice to the Union government on an interim plea seeking a stay on the Act’s application to online games of skill.
Can the new legislation withstand constitutional scrutiny? What are its broader implications? Does it run contrary to established judicial precedents that distinguish between games of skill and games of chance?
Guest: Deepak Joshi, Advocate-On-Record at the Supreme Court of India
Host: Aaratrika Bhaumik
Shot, produced, and edited by Jude Francis Weston
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
154 Listeners
11 Listeners
56 Listeners
58 Listeners
88 Listeners
104 Listeners
43 Listeners
23 Listeners
12 Listeners
3 Listeners
12 Listeners
9 Listeners
9 Listeners
95 Listeners
12 Listeners