Some better-off Nevada bettors

Nevada casino gamblers lost 2.8 percent more money betting on slot and table games in fiscal 2003 than in fiscal 2002, but some games did not contribute to the turnaround.

Casinos have won fewer from people playing blackjack, minibaccarat, and bingo, according to the 12-month fiscal year-end figures released by the Gaming Control Board on June 30. Blackjack, the top game in the state's casino sector, continued its recent decline, gaining $1.08 billion from betting companies, down 4.2 percent after a 5.4 percent decline in fiscal 2002.

Of the $3.22 billion total, Blackjack's table game multiplier accounted for 33.6 percent, down from 36.4 percent a year earlier. The state's 140-minibakara table earned $163.2 million from gamblers, a 12.42 percent decrease to $437.5 million, close to the mirror image of luxury cousin Bakara
16.49%.

The state's 43 bingo shops earned $2.5 million from reporters, a 34.7 percent drop during a year when late-summer bingo scams at several station casino properties forced state regulators to stop using some e-bingo card remenders called GTI, which allowed players to watch television while playing dozens of bingo cards at once.

While the dollar, quarter and nickel slots all reported declines in fiscal 2003, Frank Stresley, a statistical analyst at the management board, said comparisons to previous ones were skewed by a separate "multiple mark" category.

Over the past few years, operators with games where a player can choose between more than one name have been able to categorize the devices as multi-species, or by one of the names of the devices. Operators are now required to report the results of the machines only as multi-species. The multi-species machines received $863.5 million from gamblers, an increase of 135.3 percent, a change that has been attributed to Stresley's new reporting requirements and the spread of multi-species games. He also said that this change has contributed to 8.1 percent, 6.8 percent, and 5 percent declines for nickel, quota, and dollar-denominated machines.

Nickel Slot earned $1.51 billion, 23.9 percent of its total slot multiplier, cementing it as the second-largest moneymaker. Nickel devices provided 12.1 percent just 10 years ago in fiscal 1993. Quarter slots earned $1.97 billion from gamblers, down from 31.1 percent of its total slot multiplier, compared to 47.2 percent in fiscal 1993. Dollar Slot earned $1.25 billion, a steady decline of 19.8 percent of its total slot multiplier over a decade compared to 33 percent in fiscal 2003.

Among the table games with improved results were Crab, Baccarat, roulette, and defendant poker. 슬롯머신사이트

Kraft, the second most winning table game in the U.S., rose 5.9 percent to $445.4 million. Bakara Table gained 16.5 percent to $437.5 million. Roulette Table gained 1.1 percent to $262.4 million, while Paygo Poker Table earned $119.6 million, less than a tenth of the 1 percent.

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