From the Editor: Why We Built Pro Slot Games
An introduction to Pro Slot Games — a premium, multi-vertical gaming publication built on one idea: cover every slot of the gaming…
Editor-in-Chief · Pro Slot Games
Cross-vertical oversight, the weekly Editor's Letter, and the standards that hold every desk to the same bar
Marcus Vale is the Editor-in-Chief of Pro Slot Games, which means the buck stops at his desk on everything the publication puts its name to. He set the editorial thesis the whole operation runs on — that "slot" means a section of the gaming world, not a casino product — and he owns the standards that keep seven very different verticals reading like one coherent publication. His day is less about any single game and more about the connective tissue: making sure the video games desk, the tabletop desk, the esports desk, and the rest all hold to the same bar for accuracy, sourcing, and honesty.
His editorial philosophy is unfashionably plain. He believes a gaming publication earns trust the same way a good critic does — by being specific, by being right about the facts, and by never pretending to knowledge it does not have. Under his direction, Pro Slot Games treats its evergreen analysis and explainer pieces as exactly that: informed argument about real games, real studios, and real formats, not invented hands-on testing or borrowed hype. If a claim cannot be grounded in something a reader could verify, it does not run. He would rather publish a smaller, truer story than a bigger one that leans on numbers nobody can check.
Vale's role also means he writes the weekly Editor's Letter, the one place on the site where the publication talks directly to its readers about what it is trying to do and why. He uses it to explain editorial decisions, to argue for the medium, and occasionally to admit where the team is still figuring something out. He edits across the board — a Magic set review, a tournament recap, an industry labour story — and his notes tend to circle the same questions every time: Is this true? Is it specific? Would a knowledgeable reader trust it?
He cares most about the parts of gaming coverage that are easy to get wrong under deadline pressure: the difference between what is confirmed and what is rumoured, the temptation to round a fuzzy figure into a hard one, and the pull toward clickbait framing. He holds the line on all three. His remit is not to be the loudest voice on any single desk, but to ensure every desk is worth reading — and that Pro Slot Games remains a publication a serious gaming audience can rely on.
1 articles · editorial@proslotgames.com
An introduction to Pro Slot Games — a premium, multi-vertical gaming publication built on one idea: cover every slot of the gaming…