Nevada's decision doesn't appear to affect season-long fantasy sports, long-popular online and in office pools.
They try to assemble teams that earn the most points based on real-life stats in a given period with a certain percentage of top finishers earning a payout.Įntry fees on DraftKings range from 25 cents to more than $5,000. Participants on the unregulated sites can compete in games involving professional or college sports, paying an entry fee that goes into a larger pool. Nevada regulators govern the country's main gambling hub in Las Vegas, and their actions could hold sway with regulators elsewhere. The decision comes amid growing backlash by regulators and investigators, including New York's attorney general, after it was revealed employees often played on competing sites, raising questions about possible insider information being used to win.
LAS VEGAS - Nevada regulators ordered daily fantasy sports sites like DraftKings and FanDuel to shut down Thursday, saying the hard-to-miss sites that have flooded the marketplace with TV and Internet ads cannot operate in the state without a gambling license.