Bonnie and I regularly played at an out-of-town Caesars property where part of the monthly mailer was $200 in resort credit apiece. If we played our usual amount, our host would pick up food charges. So that left the resort credit to be spent at gift shops. They had a womenās store, a menās store, and a jewelry store, in addition to a typical small gift shop where you could get various sundries.
Generally speaking, you donāt expect casino gift shops to compete on price. At the menās store, I was told that if I paid with cash or credit card, Iād get a 35% discount. If I used Reward Credits, Iād get a 20% discount. And if I charged to my room, Iād get no discount. Part of the deal with the $200 resort credit was that you had to charge it to your room.
The resort credits werenāt worth anywhere near face value to us — but they were obviously worth something and made the play worth more to me than if I didnāt get to spend them. So how much are they worth?
No gift shop is worth the same amount to every player. I would wear a few of the shirts sold by this particular menās store — but not all that many. A younger man — or a man whose taste is different from mine — might find he liked a much larger percentage of the inventory than I do. Bonnie is usually with me on these trips — and she can usually find something in one of the gift shops. If I tell her she has $400 to spend at such and such a selection of stores, sheāll find at least that much for one of us — or for one of our relatives or friends.
If I were thinking a $200 gift shop award might be worth $100, I asked myself, āWould I pay $100 in cash to get that $200 gift shop award?ā For me, the answer was, āNo.ā But I might pay $50 in cash. So, I figured thatās what the award was worth.
I find it useful to turn this into a percentage — so I can add it into the mix along with the return on the game, the slot club, and other such awards. If I regularly played $10,000 and they gave me this award worth $50 to me, the award would be worth 0.5%. If I played $100,000 (which is closer to what I actually play), the award is worth 0.05%.
Frankly, something worth 0.05% would rarely be enough to tip the play-or-not-play scales into positive territory. Maybe if a play were already worth 100.3%, which is about the minimum Iāll play, Iāll make a play I might otherwise pass on. But that exact circumstance rarely happens.
It turns out that I find such awards most valuable for ākeeping Bonnie happyā reasons.
Bonnie and I keep our finances separate. If I win or lose $40,000 on a trip, it basically doesnāt affect her finances at all. But if I have the advantage on the play, and I can play on her card as well as mine, itās good for her to make the trip with me, even if there is not much for her to do once sheās there.
So, gift shop awards, at least one nice dinner per trip, free movies in the room, and excursions to sight-seeing places are all part of what we do while weāre there. Sometimes I give her half of my win in a drawing. Sheās 80 years old, Iām 77, and staying happy together is a significant part of our game plan. If there is suitable music, we dance for a few hours. If we earn cruises, she gets a big say in where we go. Bonnieās generally a good sport about coming with me when I take these ābusiness trips,ā I want her to look forward to our time together. If getting to go shopping brings a smile to her face, Iām all for it.

i agree with the smile on the face and she probably deserves it as she watch you play good luck and try to stay healthy