Delaware has become the 14th US state to authorize daily fantasy sports operations, just as the state’s real-money online gambling market took a nosedive.
On Wednesday, Delaware Gov. John Carney signed HB 249, which legislators approved on June 30. The bill amends the state’s lottery law to clarify that “interactive fantasy sports are not games of chance” due to the overwhelming skill it takes to ask a computer program to spit out 300 slightly different fantasy lineups.
The bill also states that fantasy sports aren’t “wagers on future contingent events not under the contestants’ control or influence” because the outcome doesn’t depend on a single sporting event or the performance of a single athlete. As a result, DFS no longer qualifies as illegal gambling under Delaware law.
The bill requires would-be Delaware DFS operators to pay the state an annual fee of $50k, plus 15% of gross revenue derived from Delaware players. As a result, Delaware’s legal DFS market will most assuredly be out of reach to anyone other than the sector’s big boys, aka DraftKings and FanDuel.