AGCO Removes Prime Slot Machines From GTA Convenience Stores

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agco removes prime slots
agco removes prime slots

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The Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) has pulled the plug on multiple Greater Toronto Area convenience stores for offering illegal gambling terminals disguised as “skill-based” games. These touchscreen machines, branded under the name Prime Slot, were found stationed near OLG terminals. They are extremely easy for anyone to access, including minors.

The issue? Despite their branding, AGCO inspectors say these machines behave just like classic slot games: they’re driven by random number generators, not skill, and have never passed the AGCO’s Gaming Lab certification.

The fallout was swift: registrations revoked, machines seized or disabled, and retailers slapped with Notices of Proposed Orders, each with just 15 days to respond.

Key Takeaways

  • AGCO revoked lottery-seller licenses from GTA stores hosting unregulated “Prime Slot” terminals.
  • Machines mimic slot gameplay, rely on chance, and were never AGCO-approved.
  • 15-day appeal window launched, but most similar rulings are upheld.
  • Wider inspections now underway across Southwestern Ontario.
  • AGCO targets grey-market gambling as part of broader enforcement strategy.

The Story: “Skill Machines” in Corner Stores

It started with a tip.

AGCO inspectors, responding to multiple public complaints, entered several Greater Toronto Area (GTA) convenience stores and found electronic gambling machines operating just a few feet from the checkout counter.

The terminals looked familiar. Flashy animations, spin buttons, payouts printed as cashable vouchers. But they weren’t OLG-branded slots or VLTs. These were Prime Slot machines—allegedly “skill-based” games, exempt from provincial casino rules.

Except they weren’t. AGCO’s review found that Prime Slot outcomes were randomly generated, making them games of chance under the Criminal Code. Worse, they had been installed without testing, without approval, and without safeguards, often in stores frequented by minors.

In a sweeping response, the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario pulled the lottery-seller registrations from each store, cutting off access to OLG products and revenue streams.

“These machines were masquerading as entertainment,” said AGCO CEO Dr. Karin Schnarr.

“But in reality, they were unlicensed gambling terminals—readily available to youth and completely outside of regulatory oversight.”

What AGCO Did, And Why

  • Registrations Revoked: Retailers are no longer authorized to sell OLG lottery tickets—a core revenue stream for many stores.
  • Machines Disabled or Removed: AGCO compliance officers either seized the devices or ordered their immediate shutdown.
  • Notices of Proposed Order (NPO): Issued to each retailer, allowing a 15-day appeal window through the Licence Appeal Tribunal (LAT).
  • Spot-Checks Expand: AGCO teams are now inspecting convenience stores and cafés across Southwestern Ontario, citing further reports from the public.

Rationale: Protecting Youth and Upholding the Law

AGCO’s findings were clear:

  • The machines were not approved by the Gaming Lab.
  • They relied on RNG-based gameplay, not skill.
  • Payouts occurred in-store, bypassing all standard gambling controls.
  • Their placement in family-oriented locations, often within arm’s reach of teens, posed serious ethical and legal risks.

Inside the Machine: What Is a Prime Slot Terminal?

Feature Vendor Claim AGCO Finding Consequence
Game Type “Skill-based” arcade-like gameplay RNG-determined outcomes Meets definition of illegal game of chance
Payouts Ticket redeemable at store counter No certified RTP, no responsible gambling info Violates multiple sections of the Registrar’s Standards
Placement Near lottery terminal or countertop Visible and accessible to youth Breach of Gaming Control Act and LLCA provisions

AGCO notes that even if a game includes minor skill elements, the presence of chance-based outcomes makes it subject to full regulation.

Legal Framework

 

1. Gaming Control Act & Registrar’s Standards

Section 4.6 of the Registrar’s Standards for Gaming states:

“Only gaming systems and gaming supplies approved by the Registrar shall be used.”
Prime Slot machines failed this basic requirement—meaning they’re illegal by default.

2. Lottery Seller Registration

Retailers must maintain lawful operation to retain their ability to sell OLG products. Hosting unlawful gambling automatically disqualifies them under AGCO policy.

3. Liquor Licence and Control Act (LLCA)

For stores also licensed to sell alcohol, the LLCA prohibits unlawful gaming devices under §43(1). The same legal pathway was used to enforce the GotSkill removal from bars in 2023.

This Isn’t New: GotSkill Set the Stage

The crackdown on Prime Slot echoes AGCO’s multi-year legal battle over GotSkill machines—a so-called “skill-based” terminal found in dozens of bars and pubs.

  • In 2023, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled GotSkill’s hybrid gameplay still fell under the Criminal Code’s restrictions on games of chance.
  • AGCO enforced a province-wide removal by May 15, 2023, using the same tools it’s now deploying on convenience stores.

The parallels are unmistakable. And regulators say they’ve learned to move faster this time.

The Bigger Trend: Grey Machines Across North America

Unregulated “skill” machines are booming, not just in Ontario.

In Pennsylvania, Virginia, Georgia, and Saskatchewan, thousands of similar devices have slipped into gas stations, cafés, and bars. Industry observers estimate over 60,000 unlicensed units are now operating across North America.

What makes them appealing?

  • No AGCO/OLG testing
  • No licensing fees
  • Cash-based and anonymous
  • Quick revenue for small businesses

But what they offer in convenience, they lack in transparency, safety, and accountability.

Why It Matters: The Real-World Risks

  1. Youth Access & Normalization: Machines placed in family-run corner stores blur the lines between scratch tickets and slots. This could normalize gambling behavior early for teens and kids.
  2. No Consumer Protections: No visible RTP percentages. No self-exclusion systems. No time limits. Players face all the risks, with none of the tools designed to help.
  3. Erosion of Public Funding: Revenue from OLG-run casinos supports healthcare, education, infrastructure, and local charities. Grey machines siphon that away without contributing a cent.
  4. Anti-Money Laundering Concerns: These machines operate entirely in cash, often without receipts, identity checks, or transaction logs, making them potential tools for structured cash movement or laundering.

Industry’s Response

The Ontario Convenience Stores Association issued a warning to members:

“Check every amusement device in your store. Forfeiting lottery registration can mean a loss of up to 30% of annual revenue.”

Licensed Gaming Manufacturers:

The Canadian Gaming Association praised AGCO’s quick action:

“Operators who spend millions on compliance are being undercut by these fly-by-night machines. It’s unfair—and illegal.”

Prime Slot Vendor:

The company behind the machines claimed the devices offer a “100 percent skill challenge” and expressed intent to challenge the decision before LAT.

What Happens Now?

Retailers have 15 calendar days to contest the Notice of Proposed Order through LAT. But precedent isn’t on their side. Over 75% of similar appeals are either dismissed or abandoned.

AGCO’s compliance officers are expanding inspections beyond the GTA, targeting gas stations and cafés between London and Windsor, where more Prime Slot units were reportedly spotted.

The Ministry of the Attorney General is reviewing policy options, including fines of up to CA$100,000 per machine, mirroring Virginia’s 2024 civil penalty model.

Compare: Legal vs. Illegal Machines

Criteria OLG VLT / Casino Slot Prime Slot Convenience Machine
Testing AGCO-accredited Gaming Lab No independent testing
Minimum Age 19+ enforced by security No age gating
Return-to-Player (RTP) Posted publicly (85–92%) Unknown
Responsible Gambling Tools Time limits, self-exclusion, info pop-ups None
AML Monitoring FINTRAC filings, surveillance Cash-only, no reporting

Bigger Picture: Ontario’s Regulatory Overhaul

AGCO’s 2024–25 annual report outlined a shift to “second-generation enforcement” targeting both physical and digital grey-market activity.

Current Strategy Pillars:

  • Retail sweeps for unauthorized physical devices
  • Online ad takedowns for unlicensed offshore platforms
  • Collaboration with OPP and RCMP on money laundering probes

The move against Prime Slot is part of a broader push to reclaim control over a gambling market fragmenting under grey operators and crypto casinos

Final Word

Ontario is drawing a firm line in the sand:

If it spins, clicks, or pays out, it better be licensed.

The crackdown on Prime Slot is more than regulatory housekeeping. It’s a signal: the province is done playing nice with devices hiding behind the “skill” label.

Retailers now face a blunt choice: clean up or cash out. As inspections intensify, more stores and more manufacturers will likely find themselves under AGCO’s microscope.

One thing is certain: the wild west of corner-store slot clones is closing fast.

Article prepared using publicly available documents, regulator statements, and industry sources as of July 2025.

References

[1] https://www.agco.ca/en/news/agco-takes-action-remove-unapproved-gambling-machines-ontario-convenience-stores
[2] https://www.intergameonline.com/casino/news/agco-intercepts-illegal-prime-slot-sales
[3] https://financialpost.com/globe-newswire/agco-takes-action-to-remove-unapproved-gambling-machines-from-ontario-convenience-stores
[4] https://www.canadiangamingbusiness.com/2025/07/18/ontario-regulator-warns-casinos-free-play/
[5] https://cgao.ca/docs/agco/Registrar-Standards-for-Gaming-December-2014-English.pdf

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