- Electronic Craps Game
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- Digital Craps Aruze
Crapless craps does offer free odds of 6:1 on the 2 and 12, and 3:1 on the 3 and 11. The following table shows the combined house edge by combining the pass line. Craps is one of the most exciting games on the casino floor. It is a community game as everyone is either betting with or against the shooter. The most common wager is the Pass Line bet. On the opening roll, or “come out roll,” a 7 or 11 wins and a 2, 3 or 12 loses.
Global gaming firm Aruze has developed a new craps version which has been designed to appeal to millennials. The new table game comes as a digital version game and hopes to lessen the intimidation factor at casino tables.
Las Vegas-based Aruze Gaming showcased its “Roll to Win Craps” at the Global Gaming Expo (G2E) held this week at the Sands Expo Center. The latest version of the dice game combines digital technology with a dealer and real dice. Bets are placed digitally with the dice being rolled on an LED tabletop. Payouts are similar with that on a regular table and a live dealer is monitoring all the action.
The innovation provides added comfort and convenience as players no longer need to walk up to the regular table to place bets. The dealer also doesn’t have to manually collect the chips, eliminating the chance of wrong payouts. A player’s spot lights up in flames whenever he or she places a bet or gets on a hot roll. The game creates a new environment for players and provides a sense of community.
Caesars Entertainment has already expressed interest in testing the craps version in a live casino setting. Kerry Whitney, vice president of table games for Caesars said they are considering setting up a table at the LINQ hotel and casino, in an area featuring other digital games.
In a statement, Whitney said
The one game that keeps growing year over year is craps. It’s a communal game where people can root for one another. When you walk through a casino and you hear the loudest screams, they’re at the craps table. I think the millennial type of customer will gravitate toward that excitement
Aruze Continuing To Experiment
Aruze’s “Roll to Win Craps” is the latest addition to its digital table game portfolio. The global entertainment company has an array of games that have developed to keep players engaged by using the latest technology in the market. Aruze’s electronic casino games are showcased in the “G-Station” product section of their website.
Roll To Win Craps tournament is going strong! Check out the revolutionary craps table at booth #2659 #Aruze#G2Epic.twitter.com/ShgDgm8mgT
— Aruze Gaming (@AruzeGaming) 9 October 2018
Current games include Lucky Big Wheel, Shoot to Win Craps, Virtual Roulette, Dealer’s Angels Blackjack and Dealer’s Angels Baccarat. Aruze has subsidiaries in several countries including Australia, South Africa, China and the Philippines. It debuted at the Global Gaming Exhibition in September 2014 and has since been a regular participant at the Las Vegas expo.
Kate is fairly new the whole casino industry, with a background in finance she often found herself with clients at the best casinos, she enjoys spinning the wheel!!!. She will be providing a insight into the UK industry
Can you back up what you are writing with facts?
Well, it's because more and more of these machines are showing up around the country! They also are showing up where they can't have table games, so if that is the case are they slot machines?
Bubble craps machines are probably considered 'slot machines' just as much as video poker machines are. If the bets are handled electronically and no staffers (dealers/croupiers) are needed, then it is probably considered a 'gaming device' just like a slot machine. Is there a reason you need to know if the specific term 'slot machine' applies to them?
One exception I can think of to 'they're showing up where they can't have table games': California. Casinos that were opened or had their compacts renegotiated (e.g. to add more machines) after 2010 have a stipulation saying that no games that use 'physical dice' are allowed. While I have a feeling this was targeting the versions of craps that, while cards determine the actual numbers, dice are used to determine which cards are drawn, it almost certainly applies to bubble craps as well.
Bubble craps machines are probably considered 'slot machines' just as much as video poker machines are. If the bets are handled electronically and no staffers (dealers/croupiers) are needed, then it is probably considered a 'gaming device' just like a slot machine. Is there a reason you need to know if the specific term 'slot machine' applies to them?
One exception I can think of to 'they're showing up where they can't have table games': California. Casinos that were opened or had their compacts renegotiated (e.g. to add more machines) after 2010 have a stipulation saying that no games that use 'physical dice' are allowed. While I have a feeling this was targeting the versions of craps that, while cards determine the actual numbers, dice are used to determine which cards are drawn, it almost certainly applies to bubble craps as well.
Yes, there is a reason and it goes like this, I don't like information that can't be proven and is nothing more than fiction that is passed on to anybody that wants to read it! Common sense would tell you that they are slot machines if the casinos can't have table games but now have these bubble craps machines that are now showing up in more casinos!
If they are slot machines do they have to act like real live table games? There may be a big misconception that they have to act like real table games when they don't have to because in fact they are a slot machine! Standing back and looking at the machine are the players thinking that they are playing real craps when they are not?
Yes, there is a reason and it goes like this, I don't like information that can't be proven and is nothing more than fiction that is passed on to anybody that wants to read it! Common sense would tell you that they are slot machines if the casinos can't have table games but now have these bubble craps machines that are now showing up in more casinos!
If they are slot machines do they have to act like real live table games? There may be a big misconception that they have to act like real table games when they don't have to because in fact they are a slot machine! Standing back and looking at the machine are the players thinking that they are playing real craps when they are not?
I hear people saying they are not random, and the machines are using magnets or something like that to cheat(*rolls eyes). If that's the case, it makes me wonder why most casinos don't allow you to earn points(oftentimes they start out allowing you to earn points and then quickly disallow from point earning) on something that is acting like a slot and is basically cheating people? They should be giving away triple points, running promotions and encouraging people to play their craps 'slot'.
If they can gaff bubble craps to not play fair why dont they just make more games like spin poker VP add FPDW, FPJW etc etc and gaff the hell out of them?
Why not gaff all the Video BJ as well?
I'm not sure why any halfway educated gambler would want to play them for any serious money or time in the first place, unless they have an advantage, or they are just messing around wasting time or whatever.
Electronic Craps Game
Okay for all of you guys that know everything, are bubble craps machines nothing more than a slot machine?
Can you back up what you are writing with facts?
For W2G purposes, they are treated as a slot machine rather than table game.
They are legal in some jurisdictions in which live table games are not because they fall under the definition of an electronic game.
In terms of randomness, for Nevada at least, any game that uses cards, dice, roulette wheel or other physical implement that would have set odds must have the probabilities correspond to what the odds would be. In other words, it could be RNG based, but the programmed probabilities would have to be the same as actual physical dice...at least in Nevada.
You'd do well to examine other states individually.
Can you back up what you are writing with facts?
Philisophical slot machines? Legal slot machines, IRS slot machines, de facto slot machines, ...you want evidence and FACTS?OKAY.... here is the important fact: Professional gamblers, bookmakers, million dollar bettors are reliable.
Casinos are betting that they are indeed slot machines... they are betting millions... so that makes them slot machines. I ain't seen no casinos ripping the machines out due to massive losses. Nor does there seem to be teams of parasites sucking chips from those machines.
After all the preliminary tests casinos put new games to, the final test is to put it on the floor and see what happens. Casinos saw. They are happy.
Electronic Craps
So its a slot machine even if the lawyers came up with that designation for some legal reason. Its a slot machine.
Digital Craps Vegas
Can you back up what you are writing with facts?
Philisophical slot machines? Legal slot machines, IRS slot machines, de facto slot machines, ...you want evidence and FACTS?OKAY.... here is the important fact: Professional gamblers, bookmakers, million dollar bettors are reliable.
Casinos are betting that they are indeed slot machines... they are betting millions... so that makes them slot machines. I ain't seen no casinos ripping the machines out due to massive losses. Nor does there seem to be teams of parasites sucking chips from those machines.
After all the preliminary tests casinos put new games to, the final test is to put it on the floor and see what happens. Casinos saw. They are happy.
So its a slot machine even if the lawyers came up with that designation for some legal reason. Its a slot machine.I think we need to get to the real reason the question is being asked.
Azure Digital Craps Table
There are people that think if they are a slot they can be programmed to do funny things and hold whatever the casino sets them to hold. I'm not buying it, at least not in most US jurisdictions.
Digital Craps Aruze
I suppose it's possible the machine has an RNG in it that picks what the next dice roll is going to be, by using magnets or some such nonsense. But if that somehow was the case, each number on each die would have to be equally likely to show up. So, in other words, this would have no effect on the player (unless he was trying to DI the craps machine, lol).
Is that what you're getting at, Superrick, you trying to DI the craps machines?