What's weird is Resorts is usually the most crowded casino on the Boardwalk.kewljason said:Resorts AC officially became the first AC casino to be taken over by a lender, Wells Fargo Bank today.
I hope they don't change anything! I like resorts. not flashy, not crowded and decent BJ rules. I stay at the TAJ alot, and resorts always seems less crowed and yet better rules. lolAutomatic Monkey said:What's weird is Resorts is usually the most crowded casino on the Boardwalk.
I hope they don't change the Breadsticks menu.
Went there a few weeks back and it was pretty decent. One thing I can't seem to understand is why they offer two different payouts in MTD. Some tables are 3-1 for unsuited and 14-1 suited while others are 4-1 & 11-1.kewljason said:I hope they don't change anything! I like resorts. not flashy, not crowded and decent BJ rules. I stay at the TAJ alot, and resorts always seems less crowed and yet better rules. lol
Automatic Monkey said:What's weird is Resorts is usually the most crowded casino on the Boardwalk.
Every time I go there Resorts is pretty much empty. The only thing that is crowded is their BJ games but that's no surprise considering they only have like 6 tables.
Resorts' ex-sister-casinokewljason said:Resorts AC officially became the first AC casino to be taken over by a lender, Wells Fargo Bank today.
Great illustration of the intelligence of casino executive.Thunder said:Every time I go there Resorts is pretty much empty. The only thing that is crowded is their BJ games but that's no surprise considering they only have like 6 tables.
It doesn't work this way for these guys. They see a blackjack pit as a distraction that keeps compulsive gamblers from playing slot machines. They have a chart that says their edge at BJ of 0.44% and that's that, not realizing that their actual edge is far greater. The dealers who deal the game every day don't even know BS, the executives probably can't tell a good player from a bad player either. Good for us, but bad for the casinos.Thunder said:If I were a casino executive. I'd find out what the profitability of every slot machine there is after overhead costs. Then I'd take 4 of those machines or so and determine what the profitability is of those machines vs. one blackjack table per hour after costs. If it's less profitable than the blackjack table, goodbye slot machines, hello blackjack games. If Resorts bothered even doing this simple thing, I'm almost 100% positive they'd be a much more profitable casino. The goal for them should be figuring out how to earn the biggest amount of $ per square foot of the casino. Of course, I'm too smart to be in casino mgmt. Oh well.
In fairness, there are cost associated with that bank of slot machines as well. Slot attendants, slot mechanics, the security team complete with caged train that still changes the boxes on the machines daily. Th eye in the sky is also responsible for watching slot machines and looking for slot cheats and general security is required as well.shadroch said:Somewhere, there must be a figure for what it cost a casino per shift for a BJ table. Offhand, you need a dealer, a replacement dealer, a pit boss, a eye in the sky. Then you need a security guard or two to bring chips, take the drop, and a cashier to cash out the winners chips. All these employees make salary, incur payroll taxes and recieve benefits. Then you have a couple of decks of cards, and the licensing fees for any carnival sidebets the table has. I've heard those run about $5 per shift per table, even if the table doesn't open.
A slot machine is much less labor intense, and takes less space. I'd guess you could put a bank of ten slots into the space required for a BJ table.