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Hi Matthew Promotion at Circa and the D

The Hi Matthew promo at the D and Circa is for real.

Admittedly, it feels a little strange walking up to a slot booth and saying, “Hi Matthew.” You think they’re going to look at you like you have three heads. But I’ve done this several times without any issues.

The promo is good twice lifetime at the D and Circa, but only once per day. You receive one $25 matchplay chip. Just walk up to the booth and say, “Hi Matthew,” or ask, “Is the Hi Matthew promo still going?”

And as long as you’re doing this promo, you might as well hit the D boarding pass promo and the El Cortez boarding pass promo. The D gives you two $25 matchplays if you show them a Southwest boarding pass within 24 hours of arriving in town. I think this is good each time you fly in, but I haven’t confirmed that.

Show any boarding pass and the El Cortez will give you $25 matchplay, a free drink, and a wheel spin for $10-$1,000 in freeplay ( usually $10). You can’t do the El Cortez MRB coupons and boarding pass offer in the same day; it’s one offer per day per person.

If you combine all the offers, you have $125 in matchplays , $10 in freeplay, and a free drink.

It’s a little walking to hit all three casinos, but worth about $70. Even if you skip El Cortez, you’ll have $100 in matchplays, worth about $48. Plus, you can also use the Members Reward Book for various downtown offers.

Elsewhere on this site is “Las Vegas Savings Tips,” with a table that shows other ways to save money on travel to and in Las Vegas.

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Rearranging the Deck Chairs

Despite having neither financing nor a coherent design, Bally’s Corp. insists that its eponymous Las Vegas resort is a “go.” Shuffling paperwork to create the illusion of progress, Bally’s submitted budgetary documents to Clark County. Evidently the papers projected a start date of December 2025, so we can go ahead and throw out the estimated December 2030 completion out the window. Already Bally’s has welshed on its promise to be open when the adjacent baseball stadium (theoretically to be home of the Sacramento Athletics) debuts in 2028. Nor is that all.

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Las Vegas Savings Tips

There’s a new feature on the LVA website. I have created a table that shows some ways to save money on travel to Las Vegas and how to save a little when you are in Las Vegas. The page is called Las Vegas savings tips and you can access it here.

The idea is list some different money saving ideas and also to have you share your ideas for saving some cash. The LVA site already has a ton of good information (free things to do in Vegas, LV Happy Hours, etc) so I won’t be touching on those.

If you have ideas or suggestions, please email me at [email protected].

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Stupidity, California-style

Now it can be revealed ...

Arrogance is usually the corollary of idiocy. And Santa Anita racetrack was surely arrogant in thinking it could put one over on the state of California … or on the ever-vigilant Native American tribes in the Golden State. Without getting approval or indeed, it seems, without telling anyone, Santa Anita installed 24 ‘historical horse racing machines’ (HRMs for short) at the track. Two days later, they were gone, somebody having put Attorney General Rob Bonta onto this cutesy ploy.

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I Thought About It

Bob Dancer

When you list the financial reasons to intelligently gamble at video poker, it starts with the return on the game itself and the slot club. Promotions get added in, and it’s not too long before you consider mailers.

Mailers aren’t guaranteed, and if a casino decides to reduce or eliminate your mailers, you have no recourse. From the casinos point of view, mailers are a way to encourage you to come and play again — and hopefully lose. From the player’s point of view, mailers are a reward for past play.

If you quit playing, the mailers will stop. If you stiff the casino, meaning you go and pick up goodies but don’t play, the mailers will stop. 

In my case, as regular readers know, I was planning on giving up gambling forever because of the new tax bill. It was only a matter of time before all my mailers disappeared. Still, collecting a few of them before they were cut off seemed to be a potentially lucrative approach. So how would I go about it?

My biggest mailers come from Harrah’s Cherokee, where Bonnie and I make 4-or-5-times-a-year visits. Typically, we stay 10 or 12 days and play considerably more than $1 million in coin-in split between video poker and slots. We get sizeable mailers for doing this — which figures.

Picking up the mailers isn’t easy. It’s a four-hour flight to either Atlanta (three driving hours away from Cherokee) or Ashville (one driving hour away but far fewer flights). Would I be better off coming in and staying a few days without playing, or do a quick hit-and-run and not stay there? Renting a car and a hotel room elsewhere are relatively small costs compared to the size of the mailers.

While the casino offers free rooms, it does so with the expectation that you’ll play. If I don’t play, possibly they’ll charge me for the room — at not-so-friendly prices. To get around that, perhaps it makes sense to book a room somewhere else.

I considered flying in on the last day of a mailer time period, arriving at the casino at 10 p.m. and picking up the expiring mailer money and sticking around for the new mailer time period that begins at midnight. And then leaving.

I could do that, I suppose, but the mailers will be coming in wintertime, and Cherokee is in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains. Weather can play havoc with airline schedules. A plane delay could remove my chance of getting there before the free play period ends.

I usually get free food “on my card.” Probably I could redeem that while I’m there, but I’m not sure. While I possibly wouldn’t check into the hotel and leave a credit card, I’ve been there enough that there’s one of my credit card numbers “on file.” How much they would charge me, if at all, for eating on the comp without playing is an unknown,

I have a line of credit at that casino. At no time did I consider taking out a marker for, say, $50,000 and then not repaying it. Markers are negotiable instruments. Not only would the casino collect, but my credit score would take a significant hit. No thanks.

Plus (in the hypothetical world where I would be quitting gambling), there’s always a chance that the law would be changed, and I’d want to go back there in the future. They would remember if I had significantly stiffed them before.  

I didn’t reach any conclusions as to what I would do. I have thought about it, but am still not sure what I would do.

I suspect I would do nothing of the kind of things I’ve been discussing here. At the end of the day, my integrity is important to me. Hustling an extra few thousand dollars out of a casino on my way out the door doesn’t feel right to me. I might get away with it, but if I felt bad about doing it, what’s the point?

I understand that not everybody would reach this same conclusion. What would you do?

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Atlantic City, Watch Out

Atlantic City dip; Another strike in Motown? 2

It was a signal December for Atlantic City casinos, in that Garden State residents preferred to stay home and play on the Web, rather than in the cozy (and smoke-ridden) confines of the Boardwalk. Gambling-hall revenues plunged 6.5% as the casinos suffered dreadful luck at the tables. Wagering was up 10% but Big Gaming won 11% less. Slots slumped 5%.

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Bobby Vegas — Bad Beats and Keeping Cool

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

My crew and I were relieved that during my December Golden Week trip to Vegas, on the boot heels of NFR, I didn’t end up in the hospital. Kinda broke that curse. But that history also went on my long list of things I’ve done in Vegas twice: hospitalized twice, pulled over twice (sober), seen it snow twice, and been propositioned twice before breakfast.

It was a great trip and a great time to be there—if you didn’t mind bumping into A LOT of cowboys. Funny thing, there was no parking on the first floor of Rio self- park the last Saturday of NFR. It was full of horses. But the winning and dancing were wonderful.

Still, as bad beats just seem to keep coming, I had an unexpected and unwanted Christmas present on Christmas Eve back at home. While otherwise in a great mood and having a good day, at 1 p.m. I started having vertical stabbing pains across my left chest and down my arm.

Just days before this I thought I was having a heart attack when I woke up at 5:30 a.m., drenched in sweat and the room spinning. When I sat up, I started to retch.

Called 911 and in the ER they determined it was vertigo. I was out in seven hours after being given Meclazine.

Three days later, I actually had a “small” heart attack and found myself back in the same ER. Being Xmas Eve, they told me I’d be there a few days, as only critical patients get treated on Christmas. I had a stent put in Friday morning. Duke Hospital is top notch, though being there three times in five months, not so much.

So I’m taking a few weeks to get back and as soon as I can I’ll be blogging, about the new MRB, matchplay runs, and more.

For now, I can report I was happy to receive an invite to Wynn with an old-school offer: $25 in freeplay, $25 in resort credit (the waterfall at the spa is a wonder), and two tickets to Awakenings (it’s a few years old and I’m guessing Sphere is taking a lot of business), all for $174 a night, resort fee included. And I barely play there. I mostly go to see an old dealer friend.

Taking out the tickets and credits, that’s $75 a night for two nights. At Wynn. Free parking, no triple zero roulette, some JOB, and all is well.

See, folks, there’s hope on the horizon and as for me, well … The Cat in the Hat? With maybe nine lives.

It’s apparently very hard to kill me. And no worries, scufflers, I’ll be back soon so … Keep cool and know when to cash in.

The adventure continues.