Virginia Sends Skill Games Bill to Gov Abigail Spanberger

Virginia lawmakers have sent SB661 to Gov. Abigail Spanberger, putting skill game machines back at the center of the state gambling debate. The bill would legalize and regulate the machines after the Virginia Supreme Court helped shut them down in 2023, but the politics around it are just as hard to ignore as the policy.


Good to Know

  • SB661 would cap legal skill games at 25,000 and tax gross profits at 25%.
  • Supporters say roughly 90,000 illegal machines are already operating across Virginia.
  • Pace O Matic and related figures gave more than $1.7 million to Virginia Democrats since 2023, according to recent reporting.

Virginia Tries to Swap a Gray Market for a Regulated One

Supporters of SB661 have a simple argument. Virginia already has tens of thousands of skill game machines in convenience stores, truck stops, and restaurants, and prohibition has not removed them. The bill would shrink that footprint, set rules, and bring in tax revenue instead of leaving the market in legal limbo.

The bill sets a maximum wager of $5, requires players to be 21 or older, blocks machines within 10 miles of a casino, and puts oversight with the Virginia Lottery. It also limits the market to 25,000 machines, far below the roughly 90,000 units supporters say are operating now.

Still, the donation trail has become part of the story. Recent reporting says Pace O Matic and its executives gave more than $1.7 million to Virginia Democrats since 2023, including money to key backers of the bill and $50,000 to Spanberger inaugural fund. That does not prove votes were bought, but it does make the timing look awkward.

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Critics also point to what the bill leaves out. The final version does not set a hard minimum payout percentage, which means consumer protection questions remain even under a regulated system. Gov. Spanberger had also said she wanted a unified gambling regulator first, yet that broader agency bill stalled and was pushed to 2027.

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