Category: Vegas

You Don’t Have to Travel to Vegas to Play Quality Casino Games

June 26, 2016

All Slots Casino

Las Vegas. The city that literally never sleeps. Often referred to as the Sin City, a meeting point for players, playboys, tourists and adventurers from all over the world. But, unfortunately, not anyone who dreams of visiting Vegas for the weekend can actually do it. People overseas dream about a visit to the city of lights, too. But the distance between Europe and the United States keeps their dream being a dream, not more. But they have the next best thing: the All Slots Online Casino, where they can play their favorite games over the internet.

Online gambling in Europe

Online casinos, just like their land-based counterparts, were invented in Europe. A company based in the Isle of Man combined Cryptologic’s secure online payment solutions with its game development expertise, launching the first veritable real money online casino in 1994. The following years turned a novel form of online entertainment into a billion-dollar business. Many online casinos, including the All Slots Casino, were launched in the early 2000s, and some of them – only the best – have managed to survive the regulatory turmoil and the UIGEA (the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006).

Today online casinos are strictly regulated, but accessible to the public in Europe, and banned in most states of the US.

What about the All Slots Casino

The All Slots Casino is among the oldest online gambling destinations still in business. Open to players from Europe, Australia, and Canada, as well as other territories, it offers its players a complete casino experience over the internet. Its game variety competes with, or even exceeds, what you can find in even the biggest land-based establishments: it has a complete range of table and card games, plus lotteries, scratch cards, video poker games, and a large variety of slot machines.

The games are available for download on Windows PCs, browser play on all other operating systems, as well as smartphones and tablets running virtually any operating system.

Bonuses and other benefits

Las Vegas casinos offer their patrons free buffets and drinks. The All Slots Casino can’t compete with this – instead, it gives out free cash for its players to play with. New players at the All Slots Casino get free cash worth $30 to start playing on the right foot, and more generous bonuses, worth up to $1,600, on their first few deposits. Besides, players can redeem other deposit matches and bonuses each month, and compete for amazing prizes each month.

Online casinos will never be able to compete with the Las Vegas shows and nightlife. But when it comes to games, they often exceed what the Sin City has to offer. And this without the player having to leave the house – or put on pants, for that matter.

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Daily Neon: Purple Sage Motel

June 24, 2016
Purple Sage Motel

Purple Sage Motel on the east end of Fremont Street near Downtown Las Vegas, Nevada

Photo by:LasVegas360.com

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Las Vegas Card Counters

June 23, 2016

Las Vegas Card Counters

Last year you may have heard of Hollywood megastar Ben Affleck getting in trouble for his card counting antics. Although the card counting in itself isn’t illegal, casinos do reserve the right to refuse card counters entry to the gaming floor, and can eject players whom they suspect them of card counting. As the professional player Anthony Curtis says: “the science [of card counting] is knowing how to do it; the art is being able to get away with it.”
Ben Affleck of course isn’t the first, nor will he be the last person to be ejected from a Las Vegas casino. This being the case we thought we would provide you with a list other gamblers that have found themselves in trouble for their card counting ways, or got away with remarkable winnings.

Keith Taft

Keith Taft isn’t one of the best known members of the card counting club, but he is one of the more interesting ones. Taft is one of the members of the Blackjack Hall of Fame, because of his innovative strategies for card counting that involved a whole series a different wearable computer devices over the years.

Taft unusually came from a very religious background, he first got hooked on the game of blackjack when on a family holiday to Reno. He received a token to gamble at Harrah’s Casino, he warily went into the casino, but as luck would have it the 3 hands he played were all winning ones! Taft was hooked, and from there on in he would study card counting, and even practise the game with his family. The breakthrough for him happened when he came to the realisation of why he should be doing all the card counting in his head when a computer could do the calculations for him.

Keith Taft

Keith Taft

This lead to the invention of George, a manually wired clunky 15 pound machine strapped to his chest, which attached for 4 switches hidden in his shoes which he controlled with his toes. The information of the dealt cards was then conveyed from the computer to his glasses where LED lights had been concealed. Who needs Google Glass when you have George right? Technically, this is one of the earliest pioneering forms of wearable tech, amazing when you consider that at this time in the early 70’s people like Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak were just dropping out of college, and hadn’t even begun to work on the first prototype of the Apple 1.

Eventually Taft and his crew got busted when their invention called Belly Telly. This involved hiding a camera in a belt buckle and filming the action, whilst a van with a huge satellite picked up the video feed, was discovered by a security guard. Although the law surrounding using computer devices was unclear at the time, the judge ruled that they be sentenced to 6 months in prison. Keith didn’t do time though. This incident also lead to the passing of legislation that prohibited the use of technology to aid gameplay.

Phil Ivey

Phil Ivey’s game was a little bit different from the standard form of card counting. Phil Ivey who is one of the world’s greatest poker players won £7.7 million ($11,490,000) playing a form of Baccarat at Crockfords Casino in Mayfair in London called Punto Banco. This is amazing when you consider that the game of Punto Banco is purely luck and requires no skill whatsoever. However, what the unsuspecting casino staff didn’t know that night is that Phil Ivey’s partner Cheung Yin Sun knew a skill called edge-sorting. Edge-sorting is a skill whereby the player notices imperfections on the back of cards, and memorises them to know what value the card has before it is turned over. This comes in very handy in the game of Punto Banco where a player has to guess which hand, the dealers or the players has a value that adds up closest to 9.

Unfortunately for Phil he would never see his winnings. Crockfords decided that what he was cheating, and therefore went on to withhold his winnings, and only returned to Phil his original £1 million stake. This decision was upheld by a Judge at the High Court and as such Phil won’t ever see his winnings.

Don Johnson

Although this man is technically not a card counter he is worth mentioning as his ‘lucky’ streak meant he walked away with $4 million from Caesars, $5 million from the Borgata, and $6 million from the Tropicana in Atlantic City. In one hand he won a staggering $800,000. The latter casino ended up having the 2nd lowest profits in April 2011 of any of the Atlantic City casinos. As a result the president and CEO of the Tropicana Mark Giannantonio got the boot a few weeks later. So how did he do it?

Well although he may not have been counting cards, in Tony Rodio’s words (the man who succeeded Giannantonio as CEO) “He plays perfect cards.” Don Johnson is very good at maths, and his method is based on calculating the odds against the house. What Johnson knows is that the best way to do well, is by running a smaller number of hands and paying attention to variation. As Johnson puts it the way averages work, the larger the sample, the narrower the range of variation. A session of, say, 600 hands will display wider swings, with steeper winning and losing streaks, than the standard casino charts. That insight becomes important when the betting terms and special ground rules for the game are set—and Don Johnson’s skill at establishing these terms is what sets him apart from your average casino visitor.

He knew how to play the casinos and get what he wanted from them to give just enough of an advantage over the house.

Although these people all managed to do something exceptional in their own way, they are the exception rather than the rule, card counting or trying to get an advantage over a casino in any form can get you into a lot of trouble, so before you start trying to mimic any of these methods, it’s best to weigh up the risks against the rewards. However, nothing can beat the thrill of beating the house, whatever the risk.

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Daily Neon: Ambassador East Motel Sign

June 22, 2016
No Vacancy

No Vacancy-Old Broken Neon

The old Ambassador East Motel sign on the far end of East Fremont Street. The Ambassador East Motel was demolished in 2007. The sign still remains and will be part of the neon museum collection.

Photo by: LasVegas360.com

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Daily Neon: Vegas Motel on Fremont Street

June 20, 2016
Vegas Motel

Vegas Motel with it vintage neon sign

Notice the star atop, a style used on the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign.

Photo by: LasVegas360.com

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Daily Neon: Atomic Liquors

June 14, 2016

Atomic Liquors Now Closed Now Opened

Joe and Stella Sobchik opened their Fremont Street bar some 50 years ago when the desert shook from atomic bomb detonations at the Nevada Test Site.

The bar at 971 E. Fremont Street, a couple of blocks east of the Blvd. Barbara Streisand shot pool there, the pools tables are still there, and it is rumored that everyone from Frank Sinatra to the Smothers Brothers stopped in for drinks over the years. You see it is far enough away from the Strip that even headliners could stop in a be a regular Joe, or Frank or Dean. Several movies, including some westerns and 1995’s “Casino,” used the bar as a backdrop. Atomic Liquors is one of the oldest continually open bars in Las Vegas still kept by the original owners, and hold liquor license Number 00001. Stella once told me that she used to sit facing the front door and watched the mushroom clouds rise in the distance, that view has since been blocked by buildings.

Stella Sobchick who ran the bar with her husband Joseph, passed away on Jan 15, 2011 at the age of 91. Joe passed away 3 months earlier also at 91 years. They had run the business for 55 years.

Update: Atomic Liquor is back in business.

Photo By: LasVegas360.com

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