Bally Technologies Incorporated has announced the launch of their Remote Gaming Server, a product designed to allow easy access to their stable of online and mobile games. The RGS, as it will be known in the marketplace, will allow for casinos without a history in the online realm to draw from the Bally’s database. Initially, this will include access to such items as slots, video machine, and casino management software, all fully optimized for network use.

“These interactive versions will offer enhanced bonusing, proven play mechanics, progressives and other outstanding features,” read a company statement, “that only a company with more than 80 years in the gaming industry can provide.”

The games offered through the RGS will come in two groups – play-for-free and wager based. Both will be available on a global scale on a business-to-business basis, aimed at customers just entering the gaming market. This information was confirmed by Bally’s Senior VP of Tech, Bryan Kelly, who said that his company’s “integration of the RGS into our cloud-based mobile platform gives operators the ability to incorporate Bally’s play-for-free or wager-based games into their mobile offerings.”

The great irony here is that, though based in the U.S., Bally will have a hard time marketing their products domestically. Officially, online gambling remains outside the grounds of legality.

Those able to jump on the Bally’s bandwagon, however, will meet with several new additions over the coming year. The company, says iGaming Business, is planning to add several more aspects to the RGS, including products which will assist in the management of data on the casino, slots, and hospitality fronts.

So, it appears as though Bally is going for the total digital package. Should online gambling legislation pass within the United States, they could soon be doing business on their native soil.