A New Jersey court has handed both sides partial wins, keeping the high-profile legal fight alive and pushing the case deeper into discovery.
Judge Orders Document Dump in Expanding Discovery Fight
Evolution and Black Cube are still on a collision course in New Jersey, and the latest court rulings suggest neither side is close to backing down.
Judge John C. Porto delivered a mixed decision that ensures the dispute rolls on. The core issue remains explosive: who commissioned a report accusing Evolution of operating in restricted markets, and whether that report was meant to damage the supplier’s standing with regulators.
Black Cube secured a key win. The court ordered Evolution to produce additional documents tied to the regulatory probe at the heart of the case. That includes the Spectrum Gaming report referenced in earlier hearings, along with communications between Evolution, Spectrum, and New Jersey gaming regulators. Meeting records, transcripts, and related materials must also be handed over.
Evolution had argued the requests were excessive and designed to drag out proceedings. Black Cube countered that the materials are tightly focused and central to its defense, especially after earlier court discussion pointed to Playtech as the source behind the initial report.
For operators and players watching from the sidelines, the takeaway is simple: the deeper this discovery phase goes, the more internal communications could become public.
Deposition Drama Continues
Evolution did not leave court empty-handed. The judge ruled that Avi Yanus, a director at Black Cube, must resume his unfinished deposition. That keeps pressure on the investigative firm as the evidence pile grows.
The court, though, declined Evolution’s request to fast-track proceedings under New Jersey’s anti-SLAPP laws. Judge Porto said outstanding disputes over evidence and confidentiality must be sorted before any accelerated schedule can be considered.
Translation: this won’t be over quickly.
No Sign of a Settlement
Despite chatter about a possible quiet resolution, both parties are digging in.
Black Cube welcomed the ruling, saying it looks forward to reviewing the newly ordered materials. The firm suggested the documents could support claims that Evolution’s games were accessible in jurisdictions where they shouldn’t have been.
Evolution has consistently denied those allegations. The company says it conducted an internal review once the claims surfaced and worked with regulators, maintaining that its compliance systems are robust.
For online casino players, this legal tug-of-war matters because it touches on market access and regulatory oversight. If regulators find lapses, operators using Evolution content could face scrutiny. If the claims collapse, it strengthens Evolution’s standing with watchdogs.
Industry Fallout Still Lingers
The dispute already sent ripples through the gaming tech sector after earlier developments linked Playtech to the commissioning of the report. That revelation alone sparked debate about competitive tactics in the B2B supplier space.
Now, with discovery widening and no settlement talks in sight, the case looks headed toward a full trial.
Courtroom battles rarely move fast. But as documents change hands and depositions resume, the stakes remain high—not just for the companies involved, but for a sector built on regulatory trust.









