Full-Stack Developer Jobs in iGaming

Full-stack roles are common at iGaming operators, affiliates, and platform suppliers where one engineer carries a feature from wallet API to lobby UI. Typical work pairs a Node, Java, or .NET backend with a React or Vue frontend, and the day-to-day mixes bonus engine logic, game aggregation, per-market compliance gating, and admin back offices used by casino operations teams.

Affiliate companies in particular lean on full-stack developers to run large multi-market content sites, tracking systems, and comparison tools. Smaller teams mean broader ownership, including deploys and on-call around major sporting events. The best candidates are comfortable owning money-touching code end to end rather than specializing early.

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Frequently asked questions

Where do full-stack developers fit in the iGaming ecosystem?
Everywhere: operators building player-facing features, platform and PAM suppliers serving many brands, and affiliates running high-traffic content and tracking systems. Affiliates especially favor full-stack profiles because their teams are lean.
What technologies come up most often?
TypeScript across the stack is increasingly standard, alongside Java and .NET services on the platform side, PostgreSQL or MySQL, Redis, and event queues like Kafka. Familiarity with third-party casino and sportsbook APIs is a repeated theme in job specs.
Is full-stack a good entry route into iGaming engineering?
Yes. Mid-size operators and affiliates hire generalists who can ship features across the boundary, and once inside you can specialize toward wallets and settlement, frontend, or platform work depending on what the business needs.