Posted on Leave a comment

Uh-oh, Atlantic City

One news story today bravely tried to spin Atlantic City‘s flat May numbers as “marvelous.” Meh. Glass half-full: They weren’t off 2025’s pace. Glass half-empty: At a time when regional casinos are outperforming Las Vegas, you’d expect Atlantic City to get some love. Perhaps we are starting to see an incremental effect of Class III gambling in New York City, which is bound to skim off some of the Boardwalk’s cream. Let’s agree to say that Atlantic City is holding its own.

Continue reading Uh-oh, Atlantic City
Posted on Leave a comment

Since You Asked …


The Mandalay Bay pool complex is one of the best in town. Given the regular pools, beach, wave pool, and lazy river, there’s a lot to choose from. You can elevate your experience even further by renting a cabana.

Due to all the options at the Mandalay pool complex, along with access by a limited number of non-hotel guests, it’s a busy and crowded pool complex, with lots of families and kids.

Since I was staying at the W, I could book a cabana (#W72) at the quieter pool, accessible by W hotel guests only, while being steps away from the main attractions.

The cabana comes with a fridge stocked with water and soda, plus a couple of dedicated loungers with an umbrella for shade and two inner tubes for use in the lazy river (more on that later), which I think normally rent for $30 each. The cabana also boasts a TV, ceiling fan, and safe for your valuables. The cabana technically seats six and I could have fit five other people, but that would have been a little tight. It would have been perfectly comfortable for four people. I was solo, so it was moot.

Towel and food/drink service were plentiful. I never had to wait long for an attendant to come by if I needed anything.

The full-day rental cost $375, but I booked it months in advance. Day-of reservations were going for at least $500.

I found the experience to be well worth it. I’m the kind of guy who likes to sit in the pool with my book and have someone bring me fruity drinks and I got exactly what I wanted. When I felt like it, I took a break to enjoy the wave pool, which is a fun, unique, Vegas attraction. I also tried the lazy river, but I don’t like this lazy river as much as other lazy rivers I’ve experienced in other cities; the current on this one was actually a little too fast for my comfort. It wasn’t really “lazy” at all!

Posted on Leave a comment

Mixed Signals; Sands’ Good Deeds

It may not look like much from the outside, but new Hollywood Joliet (above) is driving the bus for Chicagoland casino grosses. It will very soon have competition from within the Penn Entertainment family, as even newer Hollywood Aurora opens this month. In fact, mega-kudos to Penn for finishing the newest casino one entire month ahead of schedule. That’s a feat unheard-of in Big Gaming, where the place usually isn’t even complete when it debuts. Let’s hope Penn has set an influential example.

Continue reading Mixed Signals; Sands’ Good Deeds
Posted on 10 Comments

What I Didn’t Know Then

Bob Dancer

If you look up the season 1989 episode 45 of Jeopardy! (March 3 of that year) you’ll see what I looked like at age 42. I had studied hard for that appearance, but it turned out that I neglected to master a critical aspect of the game.

The rules were a bit different than they are now. Back then you could win up to five times in a row and then you were retired. Starting in 2003, you could keep going as long as you kept winning.

If you came in first place, or tied for first place with a greater-than-zero score, you got to keep the money you earned and come back and play in the next episode. If you didn’t win, you received no money. You were offered consolation prizes — which you paid taxes on, if you kept.

From the beginning of the contest, it was a back-and-forth match with all of us getting some answers correct and missing others. The part of the game that I hadn’t mastered was how much to bet during Daily Doubles and Final Jeopardy. I thought it was fairly straightforward. I was wrong.

Early in the second half of the game, I landed on the Daily Double in  “Astronomy” when I chose the bottom answer of that category — meaning it would be more difficult to get correct than if it had been one of the earlier answers. Choosing the Daily Double allowed me to bet any amount up to the total amount of my accumulated score. If I missed the question, the other contestants didn’t get a chance to get it correct.

While I haven’t seen a video of this episode in a while, this is what I remember: I was in third place going into the question, and if I bet everything and got it correct, I’d temporarily be in first place — with about a third of the game still to go.

If I bet everything and got it wrong, I would be wiped out and there was insufficient time left to recover and have a chance to win the game. If I bet less than everything, I’d at least have something left if I missed the question and could fight on from there.

Astronomy wasn’t my best subject. While I had taken an Introduction to Astronomy class in college more than 20 years previously, I didn’t remember much of what I had learned. I knew the planets in order (back then Pluto was still a planet!) and the names of some of the constellations. I certainly didn’t know the names of all the moons of Saturn and Jupiter. There were some questions I could answer, but not many.

The question became: How much should I bet? To simplify, I’ll give you three choices to consider:

A. “True Daily Double” — meaning I bet the maximum I could. This gives me the best chance to win the game if I get it right and wipes me out if I get it wrong.

B. Bet about 2/3 of my total — saving some money “in case” I got the question wrong. And I believed that I was probably going to get the question wrong.

C .Bet a minimal amount so my score wasn’t affected much whether I got it correct or not.

What would you bet?

I bet option b. The answer was something like: “Built on the palace grounds of Charles II beginning in 1675.”

I guessed, “What is the Greenwich Observatory?” and it turned out to be correct. I never knew when or where that observatory was constructed, but it seemed to be a momentous enough event to be worthy of a Jeopardy! question. My answer turned out to be correct — but my bet turned out to be wrong.

What I didn’t sufficiently realize at the time was that to win at Jeopardy!, you have to take your chances when they come. If I had missed the question, even if I had $1,000 left to play with, I would essentially be out of the game. Since I wanted to win (otherwise why would I be there?), I should have bet the farm and taken my chances.

As it turned out, had I bet everything and the rest of the game went as it did (big assumptions!), I would have tied for the lead following Final Jeopardy and come back to play on the next episode. Since I hadn’t bet everything, the leader going into Final Jeopardy was able to bet enough to shut me out if I bet everything and we both got the Final Jeopardy question right (which is what happened.)

So, I came in second place — got a Lazy Boy recliner (which didn’t survive the cut when I next got married) and a framed lithograph (which did). My first day of competition turned out to be my last day.

After the round was over, it was easy to calculate that I would have tied had I bet the Daily Double properly. While I couldn’t have known that was going to be the result when I made the bet, I should have been able to figure out that if I was going to win, betting everything on the Daily Double gave me the best chance. It was a small chance (I first had to get a difficult question correct) but it was my best chance.

Oh well. Spilt milk, and all that.

In case you want to test yourself on the Final Jeopardy question from that day in the category of “American Revolution,” the answer was:

One of the two people Paul Revere was attempting to warn when he made his famous ride.

While I didn’t know the correct question before hearing the answer, I knew that Revere’s ride was in the Boston area and one of the revolutionary firebrands in that part of the country was Samuel Adams, so that was what I guessed (in the form of a question.) It turned out to be correct and John Hancock would also have been correct.

I never watched the following episode to guestimate how well I would have done had I bet correctly and gone on. All in all, even though I didn’t win, I felt I had done pretty well — with one exception.

Posted on Leave a comment

Oops, He Did It Again

The Nevada Gaming Control Board‘s resident embarrassment, George Assad, would evidently like gaming stockholders to bend over and quietly take it in the shorts. Yesterday, the ancient Assad berated a Penn Entertainment activist shareholder for having the temerity—what sauce!—to defend the value of his stock against mismanagement by CEO Jay Snowden and others. The nerve of the man! Shareholder Parag Vora, that is. You’d think shareholders had rights or something.

Continue reading Oops, He Did It Again
Posted on Leave a comment

Two Italian Happy Hours and One Cajun Wildcard Worth Knowing This Week 🍷🌶️

Las Vegas Happy hours to try this month June 2026

Henderson. Summerlin. Planet Hollywood. Three different neighborhoods, three different menus, one consistent idea: serious food and real drinks at prices that let you actually try the place. Happy Hour Vegas verified all three. Here’s what to order and why each one is worth the trip.

👉 See all verified Las Vegas happy hours at Happy Hour Vegas →

🇮🇹 Azzurra Cucina Italiana — Water Street District, Henderson

Mon–Sat 4–6 PM · 322 South Water Street

Azzurra Cucina is a 30-seat Italian restaurant on Henderson’s Water Street — owned by local architect Windom Kimsey and run by Chef Alessandra Maderia, whose kitchen is unambiguously serious. The room is modern and intimate, the patio does most of the work on a good evening, and the food is the kind that makes you wonder how you went this long without knowing about it.

The happy hour menu is built around Italian classics done correctly. Chef Alessandra’s Meatballs are $10. The Gnocchi Bolognese is $12. The Penne alla Vodka is $12. The Hanger Steak is $20 — a full entree portion at a fine dining price that makes no financial sense and every culinary sense. Pair it with a $8 glass of house red and you’re done. Well fed, well spent, no reservations required.

The full happy hour menu:
🍸 Cocktails (Perfect Negroni, The Sorrento, Captain Walter) $10
🍷 House Red $8 glass · $30 bottle · House White or Sparkling $7 glass · $28 bottle
🍺 Beer $5
🦑 Fried Calamari $10
🍗 Chicken Drumettes $10
🥩 Hanger Steak $20
🍝 Chef Alessandra’s Meatballs $10
🍝 Gnocchi Bolognese $12
🍝 Penne alla Vodka $12

Order this: Hanger Steak + a glass of house red. That’s a full dinner for under $30 at a chef-driven Italian restaurant. The Water Street District is worth the drive on its own — Azzurra is the reason to stay.

Where: 322 South Water Street, Henderson · 702-268-7867

👉 Full menu & hours at Happy Hour Vegas

🌶️ Hot N Juicy Crawfish — Planet Hollywood (The Strip)

Mon–Thu 3–7 PM

Most of the regular menu is half-price at happy hour, including the margaritas and pitchers of draft beer. That alone makes Hot N Juicy worth knowing. But the detail that sets this happy hour apart is the green mussels — which, as far as Happy Hour Vegas can confirm, don’t appear on any other happy hour menu in Las Vegas. If you’ve seen them elsewhere, let us know. Until then, this is the move.

Hot N Juicy is a Cajun seafood concept with five Las Vegas locations. The Planet Hollywood location has the Strip energy to match the menu. It’s loud, it’s messy, and the food is built to punch back. The Cajun mozzarella sticks, no-head shrimp, green mussels, and a margarita runs approximately $35 total — a full table of food on the Strip for the price of two cocktails at a resort bar next door.

Order this: Green mussels + Cajun mozzarella sticks + no-head shrimp + margarita. ~$35 total. The mussels are the reason you’re here — order them first.

Where: Planet Hollywood Resort, Las Vegas Strip

👉 Full menu & hours at Happy Hour Vegas

🍷 Two Italians and a Cajun seafood spot — and there are 500+ more where these came from. Get the best ones verified and in your inbox every week → Free signup here

🍕 Ai Pazzi Pizza — JW Marriott, Summerlin

Daily 4–6 PM · 221 N Rampart Blvd

Fabio Viviani is a Top Chef alum with 40+ restaurants and a Florentine culinary background. Ai Pazzi is his first Las Vegas location — and he opened it in Summerlin, inside the JW Marriott, where it debuted to a 4.4-star rating before most people knew it existed. The happy hour is how you try a celebrity chef’s restaurant without committing to the full dinner tab.

Ten items on the menu. Nothing over $13. At a 5-star resort. The Pesce Fritto — rockfish and shoestring fries — is $13 and is the most complete dish on the list. The Sausage & Peppers Panini is $10. The Truffle Mushroom pizza with parmesan cream and mozzarella is $10. Add an Italian Spritz at $12 and you have a proper afternoon for well under $30.

The Resort at Summerlin runs a “Happy Hour Hopping” program across multiple restaurants in the building — Ai Pazzi is the newest addition and the one with the most immediate name recognition for anyone who watches food television.

The full happy hour menu:
🍷 Wine $9 · Cocktails $10 · Italian Spritz $12 · Draft Beer $5
🍚 Arancini $10
🐟 Pesce Fritto (Rockfish, Shoestring Fries) $13
🥖 Sausage & Peppers Panini $10
🍖 Neapolitan Meatball Panini $10
🍄 Truffle Mushroom (Parmesan Truffle Cream, Mozzarella) $10
🍕 Pizzette — Charred Pepperoni $10

Order this: Pesce Fritto + Italian Spritz. Rockfish and fries with a proper Aperol drink at a Top Chef alum’s restaurant in Summerlin for $25. That’s the play.

Where: JW Marriott Resort, 221 N Rampart Blvd, Summerlin

👉 Full menu & hours at Happy Hour Vegas

Three Happy Hours. Three Neighborhoods. All Verified.

Henderson’s Water Street. The Strip at Planet Hollywood. The Resort at Summerlin. None of these require a reservation. All three are open this week. Happy Hour Vegas tracks current menus and hours across 500+ venues. What you see here is confirmed and current (Jun 2026).

👉 Browse the full Las Vegas Advisor Happy Hours directory 500+ verified happy hours with updated menus, hours, and prices across the valley.

Posted on Leave a comment

Bobby Vegas — Advantage Evangelist Strikes Again

Bobby Vegas: Friends Don’t Let Friends Play Triple-Zero Roulette


A reader asked me to “show him the way” to easy play. Then he wouldn’t listen. I was frustrated, but kept on.
What brings me great satisfaction? Turning just one newbie away from the dark side of foolish wasteful gaming. This is a calling, my friends. We are but seekers of the truth, hunters of the mathematical epiphany manifesting as a royal flush.

That slim chance of deliverance is a 40,000-1 redemption. We soldier on, knowing it’s coming if we just learn to play the Good Game.

Really, it’s okay to just play. Heck, I have a profound desire — no, a need — to play, to dance and imbibe like any of us in this one-of-a-kind adult Disneyland, even at my advancing age and maybe even more so. It keeps me young and fresh and alert.

But as they say, “You can’t keep it if you don’t give it away,” so when I was corresponding with “Joe,” though frustrated, I kept insisting this neophyte do what for many these days seems a rare commodity: THINK!

Read “The Best Video Poker on the Strip,” learn the games, and walk away from anything under 99.5%. Avoid the siren call of the Strip — the bright lights enthralling you as your wallet is vacuumed clean — and your intense regret on the flight home, hungover and broke. “Why did I go to the (dark chapel of) ATM again, and again?”

It’s okay. You’ll get another chance at redemption. As long as you didn’t actually sign a marker for your home, car, and first born.

But even Joe, after pleading “I want to play at Caesars,” saw the light. “I didn’t realize even at quarter level I’d need a $1,000 bank and at $1/$5 many times more than that.”

Though he’d danced along the edge of the bad-gaming precipice, he turned away! That satisfaction, turning one player and toward the light of advantage play? Excellent.

This is not a game for everyone. It requires patience, skill, and dedication, while frivolity reigns and surrounds you like a waterfall. Witnessing people plied with free drinks, pouring dollar after dollar down the rat hole, hoping against hope, is downright tragic, especially knowing that if they just looked at the pay schedule and understood what they were seeing, their future would be nicely laid out for them and they could’ve avoided all the sucker traps. Maybe 3% do. Is that you?

Here’s the kicker. Once they see us coming, then observe us for a time, the Big Houses don’t like us at all.

“Don’t give that guy a room, a meal, free play, or a damn dime. He actually knows what he’s doing and we can’t have that!”

And like a lonely Dirty Harry (“Do I feel lucky?”), I ride on down the road. No worries, there are 100 more where Joe comes from.

And since he read the guides, is learning the good games, and will be on the search for the better way of advantage play, I, having converted one more soul, for that today I’m content.

Posted on 15 Comments

Playing Craps with an Advantage

Bob Dancer

This article is not about dice control. There are organizations that will sell you lessons that purport to teach you how to throw the dice so that sevens come out less often than their normal 1-in-6 frequency. Stanford Wong, a respected gaming writer, wrote a book on how to do this and came on Gambling with an Edge to talk about it. (Later he said he wasn’t sure if it worked or not.)

Call me a skeptic. Frank B was also on our show and he convinced me that this was likely impossible — and if not impossible, at least very difficult. Today’s article is about something else entirely. 

I’m assuming you know the basics of craps before we start. If you don’t, and you want to, www.wizardofodds.com/craps provides an excellent free primer you can read.

A friend told me about a casino, not in Nevada, where if you play craps for $50,000 coin-in a month, you get very nice weekly mailers. He asked me if this was potentially beatable.

Absolutely!  . . .  Depending.

In simple terms, it’s beatable if the mailers and comps exceed your expected loss from playing $50,000 a month at a negative game.

The biggest factor is, “Do they count odds when they figure your average bet?”

The usual answer is no. But sometimes they do! Especially at small, out-of-the-way casinos where somebody in marketing gets a “brilliant” idea on how to attract more play.

Odds are an even money bet, meaning neither the house nor the player wins or loses on these bets in the long run. Well run casinos do not count odds bets as part of your average. Since the house doesn’t make money on these bets, they don’t reward players for making them.

But if they do . . . 

For now, let’s assume they count odds bets. In this case, you want to be betting the don’t pass/don’t come side and laying odds rather than betting the pass/come side and taking odds — simply because the size of the bets you make when laying odds are larger than when you’re taking odds.  

If they do not count odds in your average bet, it doesn’t matter a lot which side you take. While the ‘don’t’ side has a very slightly lower house edge against you, there are social reasons why it’s better to take the pass/come side. Namely, more than 90% of players bet the pass/come side and you blend in better when you go with the crowd. 

Betting $50,000 coin-in takes a while, so let’s assume you’re going to bet $25 a roll and you’re going to do it on the pass/come side. Now what?

On every come out roll, make your bet. This will create a “point” to hit (4,5,6,8,9, or 10). Do not buy numbers. That’s more expensive.

If it’s not the come out roll and you don’t have bets on all six of the points, bet $25 on the come. This will keep the most money in action per time period. 

After knowing how to play, the object becomes slowing the game down. The casino isn’t actually counting every bet you make. They use your average bet and the time you are at the table to make an estimate.

To slow the game down, it’s better to be playing at full tables, where lots of players are making hard way and other sucker bets than it is to play at a table where there are very few players. The more people who are making these bets, the longer it takes to pay them off. So you get fewer hands per hour.

When it’s your turn to throw the dice, take your time! While I believe that all the dice are the same and if you throw them and hit the foam diamonds at the end of the table the dice will be “random enough,” dice players as a group are superstitious. Many players have quirks. Be a quirky shooter!

You will be presented with a group of dice at the start of your roll and instructed to pick two of them. Take 10 seconds deciding which ones are lucky! When it’s time for you to throw the dice, take time to set them “just so” before you let them go. It won’t affect the outcome, but it will kill valuable seconds.

After all, other than the mailers you’re getting back, every roll made costs you money. The fewer rolls you can make, the less money you will lose in getting your mailers.

Approximately every 10-15 rolls, throw one or both dice off the table! Apologize profusely, of course. Then say, “Same dice, please,” as though it really matters. Well, it does matter. When the die is retrieved, the box man is going to have to examine it to make sure it’s okay, and if you have insisted on the same dice, everyone has to wait until he finishes that process. If you didn’t request the same dice, he can examine the die during the time you’re throwing.

Aim, without appearing to, for stacks of chips at the other end of the table. If you can hit one (which you won’t usually be able to do), they will need to scramble to figure out how many chips were in whose stack. This takes some time. Sometimes there is a dispute about who had which chips. Great! That takes a lot of time!

Once an hour or so, step back from the table (while you can still see your chips to make sure nobody is messing with them), and take a five-minute fake phone call. You’re still there, sort of, and your clock keeps running while you’re not losing anything!

Occasionally, ask a question. Perhaps for the best nearby Chinese restaurant — or whatever. It will take time to get the answer. Wasting your time is your friend! In his book, Comp City, Max Rubin discusses other ways to slow the game down. Well worth reading. It’s almost 30 years old, and some things have changed since then, but the general principles outlined in the book still apply.