February 8th, 2013 at 10:35:18 AM
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February 8th, 2013 at 10:41:36 AM
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HOLY BJINGO ! Well done, Dan.
Shed not for her
the bitter tear
Nor give the heart
to vain regret
Tis but the casket
that lies here,
The gem that filled it
Sparkles yet
February 8th, 2013 at 11:36:37 AM
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Congratulations, Dan!
Now, for the relevant questions:
1) Is Palace Station included in this?
2) Do you get a cut of the progressive bet?
A bit of an explanation: 1) I can easily get to palace Station, and I'd rather play EZPGP than regular PGP. 2) If a friend gets a cut fo the progressive bet, I'm more likely to make it (at least a few times).
Now, for the relevant questions:
1) Is Palace Station included in this?
2) Do you get a cut of the progressive bet?
A bit of an explanation: 1) I can easily get to palace Station, and I'd rather play EZPGP than regular PGP. 2) If a friend gets a cut fo the progressive bet, I'm more likely to make it (at least a few times).
Donald Trump is a fucking criminal
February 8th, 2013 at 11:57:49 AM
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DEQ is committed to making EZPGP their next big game....Dan is on his way, congrats!
February 8th, 2013 at 12:23:11 PM
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Thanks, everybody!
EZ Pai Gow has been out at ALL Station properties for over a week now.
The game is doing well, particularly at Boulder, Fiesta Henderson, Green Valley Ranch, and Sunset Station.
Of course it is at Palace Station, but on a completely manually dealt game - without a shuffler. They have been waiting a week for the new shuffler machine. But yes, it is at Palace station, and I played on a busy manually-dealt game there earlier this week.
DEQ's progressive system allows the player to:
1. Bet $1 to $5 on his own hand for the progressive, and;
2. Bet $1 to $5 on the DEALER getting any hand that wins on the Progressive (a Full House up to a 7-card straight flush.)
All "flat payouts" are multiplied by the amount bet. for example, if you had bet $5 on the dealer's hand, and the dealer gets a four of a kind that pays 75:1, you get $375, - not $75. The progressive jackpot wins are not multiplied, though.
Betting the dealer's hand may be shared if the dealer's hand hit the progressive jackpot, and if other players had also bet on the dealer's hand, but it is still a big win. Again, the flat-pay payouts are always multiplied.
EZ Pai Gow has been out at ALL Station properties for over a week now.
The game is doing well, particularly at Boulder, Fiesta Henderson, Green Valley Ranch, and Sunset Station.
Of course it is at Palace Station, but on a completely manually dealt game - without a shuffler. They have been waiting a week for the new shuffler machine. But yes, it is at Palace station, and I played on a busy manually-dealt game there earlier this week.
DEQ's progressive system allows the player to:
1. Bet $1 to $5 on his own hand for the progressive, and;
2. Bet $1 to $5 on the DEALER getting any hand that wins on the Progressive (a Full House up to a 7-card straight flush.)
All "flat payouts" are multiplied by the amount bet. for example, if you had bet $5 on the dealer's hand, and the dealer gets a four of a kind that pays 75:1, you get $375, - not $75. The progressive jackpot wins are not multiplied, though.
Betting the dealer's hand may be shared if the dealer's hand hit the progressive jackpot, and if other players had also bet on the dealer's hand, but it is still a big win. Again, the flat-pay payouts are always multiplied.
Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes - Henry David Thoreau. Like Dealers' uniforms - Dan.
February 9th, 2013 at 4:51:51 PM
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Hey Dan, I just heard a rumor our property will be getting EZ Paigow sometime this year, and I believe, though not certain, it will be replacing Fortune Paigow. So Congrats!
My question for you would be does EZP have a progressive bet? And if not, I wonder what we're going to do with the accrued jackpot money... hmmm, maybe roll it into one of the other progressives. That's about as fair a way to handle it as I can think of.
My question for you would be does EZP have a progressive bet? And if not, I wonder what we're going to do with the accrued jackpot money... hmmm, maybe roll it into one of the other progressives. That's about as fair a way to handle it as I can think of.
February 9th, 2013 at 5:55:22 PM
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Quote: MonkeyMonkeyHey Dan, I just heard a rumor our property will be getting EZ Paigow sometime this year, and I believe, though not certain, it will be replacing Fortune Paigow. So Congrats!
Thanks!
Quote: MonkeyMonkeyMy question for you would be does EZP have a progressive bet? And if not, I wonder what we're going to do with the accrued jackpot money... hmmm, maybe roll it into one of the other progressives. That's about as fair a way to handle it as I can think of.
Yes, of course it does, - I mentioned this above.
On DEQ's "G3" progressive, - which comes optionally with EZ Pai Gow:
1. You can also bet and win on the DEALER getting a progressive-level hand, as well as yourself, and
2. and you can bet up to $5 on YOUR Progressive, the DEALER's progressive - or both !! - so that ALL progressive "Flat payouts" are multiplied by how much you bet, although the jackpot hands are limited to the jackpots. On jackpot hands won by the dealer, the jackpot is split if mulitple players had bet it, and by how much they bet it.
Now - Your casino may have either the felt game, or the base game WITH the progressive system added to it. The G3 Progressive system is an optional feature. Half of the installs are the pure base game - just table bets - and it REALLY flies, just moves along with no commission. The other half of our installs are with the Progressive action.
The progressive system is very advanced, and there is a tiny bit of "learning pushback" because it is a fancy [capable] system, it requires familiarity with it. But to win on the dealer's hand, or to see your Royal or Straight flush, or four-of-a-kind bonus Multipled on its payout - is just awesome to hit.
Very Frankly, some places perfer the "base game only" EZ Pai Gow - because you're pumping out hand after hand for the base game action, and still win big on the regular bonus bet.
Other places - serious Pai Gow poker houses - prefer the G3 progressive system added to the base EZ Pai Gow game - because players like the options of winning on the dealer's progressive hit hand, - and they like having their all very high non-jackpot high-hand wins multiplied. But these areas and casinos have serious Pai Gow dealers and players, and break-in dealers and tourist players are somewhat thrown by any more complex system.
The Fiesta Henderson and Boulder Station, along with the Venetian and the Cannery group, have the G3 Progressive system on EZ Pai Gow down pat and are rolling along very well at 100%. Other properties with the G3 progressive system are in a "build-up learning curve" process, where dealers and players are learning and adapting to a more advanced system.
Again, the full G3 system is for serious Pai Gow houses with advanced dealers and players, and the base EZ Pai Gow game without the advanced system is for less advanced casino houses.
Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes - Henry David Thoreau. Like Dealers' uniforms - Dan.