✨Clarity, Leadership & AI: The Modern Art Director’s Guide to iGaming by Maria Desislava Kasabova
Maria-Desislava Kasabova
Art Director · GameArt
Maria-Desislava Kasabova is an Art Director at GameArt with strong expertise in shaping visual direction and defining the mood of games. She brings proven experience in leading creative teams, ensuring artistic consistency, and delivering high-quality, polished results across projects.
LinkedIn →🎮 What visual qualities or habits consistently separate good game art from art
that truly elevates a game’s overall experience?
✨ Good game art is often considered as technically polished and visually appealing, but art that
truly elevates a game goes beyond aesthetics. In games, hierarchy is essential. If the player
doesn’t instantly understand where to look, the art is not doing its job. For me the real
distinction comes from intention – every element should serve a purpose.
Since I’ve worked across very different types of games, from slots to AAA projects, I can give a
clear example with UI/UX. Great UI is the one that ‘’blends in’’ seamlessly. It doesn’t get in your
way – it simply exists exactly where it needs to be. It can be minimalistic or rich in detail, but it
looks like a part of the game and helps you interact with it.
If the foundation is strong, everything else feels seamless.
🧩 In fast-paced iGaming environments, what mindset helps creative teams
maintain quality without burning out?
🎵 Thank you for this question! It is extremely important, especially nowadays, when the industry
is highly dynamic and constantly presenting new challenges. Personally, those challenges
motivate me to grow.
Since I was young, I’ve had a motto: “Consistency + patience = success.” Working in fast-paced
environments has taught me that mindset is everything. For me, discipline and learning how to
work ‘’smart’’ are essential.
By “working smart,” I mean understanding that today we have access to enormous amounts of
knowledge – best practices, courses, tools, techniques. The real skill is filtering what truly helps
you become more efficient while maintaining quality. This not only optimizes production, but
also strengthens you as an artist.
Structured pipelines, clarity in decision-making and strong team communication are crucial. In
my experience, burn out often comes from unclear direction. When the vision is aligned, the
process becomes smoother.
I constantly encourage my team to work with discipline and intention, because in the end you
see the results – stronger projects, stronger portfolios and personal growth.
🌀 When trends move quickly, how can artists develop strong visual judgment instead of simply copying what’s popular?
✨ Trends in iGaming evolve at different speeds. Some disappear quickly, while others stay relevant
for years. The real challenge is not how fast trends move, it is the saturation that follows. When the market becomes filled with similar concepts and visual styles, differentiation becomes the real
creative test. When companies begin experimenting with similar mechanics or visual approaches and
combine features in new ways, that’s where evolution happens. However, artists need to strengthen their fundamentals – composition, color, contrast, visual hierarchy – because principles outlast trends. When you understand why something works, you
can adapt it intelligently instead of copying it.
💥 Which AI tools or workflows genuinely help accelerate production today, and how should artists use them without losing creative ownership?
🎮 I started exploring AI tools around 4 years ago, when they were still in early development and
far from what they are today. I began with Stable Diffusion, which gave me a strong technical
foundation and understanding of how these systems work. Later, I expanded into tools like
Midjourney, ChatGPT, Nanobanana and so many others.
Each has strengths and limitations. Stable Diffusion, for example, allows deep customization and
model training, which many other platforms don’t offer.
AI tools are becoming part of our workflows and I see them as powerful assistants rather than
replacements. In such a fast-paced industry, AI is increasingly becoming a production
requirement for faster iteration. Artists who completely reject it – risk falling behind.
It is extremely useful for mood exploration, reference generation and accelerating repetitive
tasks. However, creative direction must always remain human. AI should support thinking – not
replace it.
At the same time, I often tell my colleagues: use AI as a production assistant in work, but in your
personal creative projects, allow yourself to create without it. That’s where pure artistic
satisfaction lives.
🧠 What practical steps can mid-level artists take to become more dependable
and leadership-ready within a studio?
❤️ For mid-level artists who want to grow into leadership roles, reliability and communication are
just as important as artistic skill. Being dependable under pressure, understanding production
constraints and thinking beyond your own tasks are key.
Leadership is about seeing the bigger picture of the company and the project, not just
completing individual assignments.
🛠️ Slot games can easily become visually overwhelming. What principles help keep designs clean, readable, and emotionally impactful?
🎮 Slot games can easily become visually overwhelming, which makes balance crucial.
Strong focal points, controlled contrast and breathing space in the UI help keep designs clean
and emotionally impactful.
If everything shines, nothing shines.
🔍 What is the healthiest way for artists to approach feedback so it strengthens
their work instead of discouraging them?
⚡ For me, the key is balancing professionalism with humanity. You need to be honest and clear,
but also respectful. Feedback should be based on real observations and design principles.It is
about improving the project, not judging the person.
When artists treat critique as collaboration rather than judgment, when they also feel
respected, they are much more open to improving their work. They grow much faster.
💬 Which skills should artists start developing now to stay relevant in the next 3
5 years of iGaming?
🚀 Looking ahead, artists should focus not only on technical skills, but also on adaptability.
AI literacy, understanding production pipelines, cross-team communication and even basic
awareness of player behavior and data will become increasingly important.
The industry is evolving rapidly and strategic thinking will be as valuable as artistic talent.
🎮 What responsibility do art leaders have in shaping not just visuals, but studio culture and creative confidence?
💡 From personal experience, art leaders are responsible not only for visuals, but also for shaping
culture. We set standards, but we also build atmosphere.
I always try to create a friendly and supportive environment. When artists feel trusted and
supported, they take creative risks and that’s when innovation happens.
True leadership is not only about control – it is also about setting clear direction, empowering
people and creating an environment where they feel encouraged to grow.
💬 How do you see iGamity contributing to knowledge-sharing, recognition,
and stronger collaboration within the iGaming creative community?
🚀 I personally follow the iGamity page regularly and appreciate how different games from
different providers are constantly highlighted. It takes only a few minutes to explore a new
game, but by doing this consistently, you build strong visual literacy. You start collecting
references, mechanics and ideas mentally.
Over time, this becomes a kind of internal mood board. When you begin a new project, you
already carry a rich visual library in your mind.