Author: Staff (Page 10 of 18)

Turning your Garage into your Home Casino

For a games night with a difference, how about turning your garage into your home casino? All you’ll need is a couple of props and some bar stools, and you’ll be well away. Offering a fun and cost-effective method of reproducing the frenetic fun of live gambling domestically, this clever idea redefines the notion of bringing your winnings home.

The garage is the perfect location for your transformation. Often spacious and invariably neglected when it comes to the interiors, garages tend to keep the light out and the sound tucked in, allowing you to party through the night without angering your neighbours. Equally, games are very easy to get your hands on, with second-hand slot machines selling cheaply on websites such as eBay. Roulette tables are similarly inexpensive, and offer a pocket-friendly way of making those chips count. Although it’s associated with high stakes and excess, most gambling apparatus is actually very cheap, which is why this project has the potential to be a genuinely prosperous one.

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Cheating and poker

If you look at the history of poker, cheating has always been part of the game. This was true even in places like Las Vegas, particularly when one-deck games were prevalent.

Here’s an interesting video that discusses this history and some of the specific cheating scams. It also discusses strategies to help you establish or hide your poker face.

The future of online poker

There have been some startling developments in the poker world recently, and an article in Grantland sums up the future of online poker:

After 15 months of speculation, frustration, and general inertia, the former online poker players of America finally heard the good news on Tuesday. A deal had been struck between the online gaming sites Full Tilt Poker, PokerStars, and the Department of Justice. Another deal between the DOJ and Absolute Poker was reported with details forthcoming. The early details are startling: PokerStars, one of the three companies shut down last April, will purchase its former competitor, Full Tilt, and pay the U.S. government $547 million to settle a civil lawsuit the government brought against Full Tilt. A portion of that money will be used to reimburse U.S.-based Full Tilt players who had their accounts frozen during the shutdown. PokerStars agreed to directly pay back another $184 million to non-U.S. customers to settle their outstanding balances.

The agreement signaled the imminent return of online poker in the United States after a lengthy hiatus that damaged the poker industry with dropping television ratings, waning interest, and a litany of lawsuits against sites like Full Tilt. Nobody thinks that PokerStars would have invested $731 million without some certainty that online poker would soon be legal in the United States.

It’s worth asking, though: Has poker’s moment passed? Has the biggest fad in the past 25 years of gaming — one that spawned movies, TV series, clothing companies, hundreds of books, and its own pidgin language — given up the ghost?

It will be fascinating to see the rush of services out there once regulations are finally in place.

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