Me have not been paid.
This could be due to someone who could make decisions, but actually didn't make the decision. Or possibly, it was someone in the management team of the casino who didn't understand the fact that they had offered several free roll tourneys, that those free rolls would result in winners, and that the winners would actual be wondering where the winnings were. Let me add,
quickly wondering where the winnings were.
I am very confused though. When you host a tourney, doesn't one realize that the most of the players will know they won something and would be checking their accounts and jumping on chat with CS frequently to ask about the winnings?
Why would anyone (if one was in the casinos shoes) set themselves up with problems? I enjoyed playing the games. Everything about the casino has RTG all over it and it appears that they may still have issues with the bundling up of different softwares. Who knows.
I kinda compare this situation to a manager of a group of people at a business. The manager talks alot with their subordinates, and forgets exactly what they had speciffically told the employee(s) about things they were going to do, raises they would give, or whatever was said. Many managers find out later it is absolutely critical to your relationship with your employees to remember exactly what you (as a manager) may have promised when it affects the employee personally, financialy, etc. Nearly every employee will remember almost word for word what was promised. If it was a raise, the employee may be thinking (once an hour or more while working) how much more money they have just made in that one hour. Many managers have learned not to promise anything.
Well, not to be too harsh, but it's possible the casino may have to learn this very important item the hard, less profitable way.
In case I wasn't clear: the casino communicated the offering of a tourney, players responded to the stimuli, some players won. Players remember what was promised, ask, and hear nothing.
To me it is the principal, not the $2 bucks. Okay, it's the $2 bucks.