Mirage

By: Poker Shrink – April 26, 2008

3cardsThis report is offered without commentary or critique. Readers are welcome to draw their own conclusions and scathing commentary is welcome in the comment section. There is a new form of poker being tried in several casinos. The Mirage in Las Vegas is one of the largest poker rooms to give Texas Hold'em Plus a trial run.

"Plus" is played exactly like normal Texas Hold'em except that after the hole cards are dealt and before the first round of betting, each player in turn may discard one of their down cards and replace it for an amount equal to the small blind. The "Plus" bet goes into the pot and the deal then plays out like any other Hold'em hand.

One benefit, of course, is that the house is likely to get a full rake on the game with between $0 and $10 in a $2/$4 game or up to $20 in a $4/$8 game being added to the pot pre-flop.

We observed several tables of "Plus" being played at the Mirage and the most common play was for a player to buy a new down card and then still fold the hand. In effect, as many as 50% of the players were paying a small blind in nearly every hand. Players with an Ace-rag were always willing to buy a new card to go with their Ace.

Hold'em Plus is the first patented poker game played in a poker room, as opposed to table games like Caribbean Stud and Let It Ride. Rooms wishing to offer Hold'em Plus to have to pay a licensing fee to the developer.

 
By: Poker Shrink – November 16, 2006

MGM CEO Terry Lanni said that the New Democratic leadership in the U.S. Congress could provide a chance to explore legalization of online gambling.


A new U.S. law making it illegal for banks, credit card companies and online payment systems to process payments to online gambling companies "makes no sense whatsoever. The Republican Party simply pandered to the religious right."

Lanni would like to see a study commissioned to examine whether online gambling can be successfully regulated in the United State.
The American Gaming Association, of which Lanni is the current chair, is expected to decide in December whether to pursue legislation calling for such a study.

On the other side of the pond, more reasonable and more fiscally minded politicians are going for the regulation over prohibition in their laws.


"Britain wants to be second to none in regulation of Internet gambling ... We firmly believe that the way forward is to regulate, rather than prohibit," said Peter Dean, chairman of Britain's Gaming Commission.

Dean said that from a British perspective, the U.S. ban is puzzling, in that prohibition doesn't have a conspicuous record of success in the US or Great Britian.

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