Technology | Zynga Zynga Is Trying to Get a Gambling License Company files paperwork in Nevada By Kevin Spak Posted Dec 6, 2012 9:40 AM CST Copied This undated image provided by Zynga shows a screenshot of Farmville 2, announced on Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2012. (AP Photo/Zynga) Papa needs a new pair of … cows? Zynga yesterday filed the first salvo of paperwork necessary to obtain an online gambling license in Nevada, the Wall Street Journal reports. But don't expect to be betting on Farmville (or more likely titles like Zynga Poker) anytime soon. The document filed yesterday was a request for the state to decide if Zynga is even potentially suitable for a license, and that decision alone is expected to take 12 to 18 months. It's unclear how long after that final approval would come. The move comes amidst a rapidly changing legal landscape around online gambling. Nevada became the first state to legalize online poker earlier this year. Though it has handed out a few licenses already, none of the companies' online poker games is up and running yet. And when they are, they'll be limited to state residents. But that could soon change: Harry Reid and Jon Kyl are working on a bill that would legalize online poker nationwide and even create an Office of Online Poker Oversight, the Journal reported yesterday. However, the bill would simultaneously ban most other forms of online gambling. Read These Next Photographer denies close-up shots were attacks on Trump figures. Suspect in Brown University shooting is found dead. NASCAR is devastated by driver's death in plane crash. Cartoonist Scott Adams paralyzed amid a battle with cancer. Report an error