PENNY SLOTS SPENDING BENEFITS FROM RECESSION
24 April 2009
Gamblers may be cutting back like other
consumers, but not on the cheap slots
Hard pressed consumers in the United States have not
given up completely on gambling, but they are turning
increasingly to using penny slots for their
entertainment.
Associated Press reports that
spending on penny gambling machines produced about
one-fourth of all slot machine revenue in Nevada last
year, and more in other states. In Missouri, one of few
states where gambling revenue rose in 2008, more than
half of all casino revenue came from penny slots. For
many casinos, penny slots are producing the only kind of
revenue that's rising.
Gamblers say they like the
machines — which were impractical before quiet paper
payouts started replacing the tumbling bucketfuls of
coins in a jackpot — because they can play longer for
the same amount of money. And casinos don't mind,
because they say that this product is more lucrative for
the house.
"Affordability is why people love
them," Frank Legato, a slot machine expert and editor of
Las Vegas-based Global Gaming Business magazine told
Associated Press. "Casinos just love them because the
average bets are the same as the quarter or dollar
games, but their house edge is bigger on these games.
"People playing penny machines are not concerned
about that. They just want to have fun and play a long
time with little money."
With 3-D video graphics,
bonus spins and familiar story lines like "Star Wars" or
"Wizard of Oz," the penny slot machines provide a form
of "active participatory entertainment" that wasn't
available with the old three-reel slots. That makes them
especially big among people who go to casinos for the
social aspect.
Small bets are big business.
Missouri's 12 casinos hold nearly 11 000 penny
slots, more than half their machines. Statewide, penny
slots brought in $81.1 million in February alone, which
is about 55 percent of the $146.6 million casinos won
during the month.
In adjacent Illinois, which
lost gamblers to Missouri in 2008 when a smoking ban
went into effect, penny slots brought in $18.9 million
in February, or roughly 15.4 percent of $123.3 million
in total casino revenue for the month.
Missouri
is among five states — Iowa, Indiana, South Dakota and
Pennsylvania are the others — where commercial gambling
revenue rose in 2008, while it fell 8.5 percent
nationwide. Tribal casinos' revenue is not counted in
national tallies.
Darrell Pilant, vice president
and assistant general manager at Harrah's in North
Kansas City, said the number of penny machines is
growing because patrons prefer them. And he thinks that
growth will continue as new technology makes no-coin
play even more appealing.
"I can't say that in
three years or five years every machine on the floor
will be video, but certainly at some point there will be
fewer and fewer traditional slot machines," he said.
Higher-denomination, three-reel slot machines will
always be in demand among hard-core gamblers who play
for large jackpots and not necessarily entertainment, he
said. But their presence in casinos is gradually
diminishing.
Technological changes have made the
concept of denomination almost irrelevant, experts say.
Bill Eadington, director of the Institute for the Study
of Gambling and Commercial Gaming at the University of
Nevada-Reno said the term penny slots is a misnomer
because most wagers on the devices are much greater.
"There's a touch of delusion to this whole
discussion," Eadington said. "The average play per spin
is obviously way above a penny — usually the 30- to
50-cent range, depending on the market."
A casino
spokesman compared someone losing $30 or $40 in a slot
machine over a few hours with a person who spends the
same amount going to a ball game or night on the town.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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