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Atlantic City to have first video game gambling machines

Mock if old. I searched.

Danger Arena is a first person action game that is played with a gaming controller. In order to get a payout, players must play the game using the same skills they would when playing a regular first person shooter. If you frequented arcades back in the day then the cabinet for this machine will look familiar to you. The game is supposed to generate interest in video games, gambling, and eSports.

Developer GameCo Inc., has members of gaming companies such as Ubisoft and Blizzard. The company will debut Danger Arena this fall at Caesar’s properties in Atlantic City. These include Caesars, Harrah’s Resort and Bally’s Wild Wild West.
...
GameCo Inc. plans to eventually create video game gambling machines based in other genres such as fighting, action, adventure, sports, platforming, racing, and more. This could be a big thing considering how the number of people who play video games grows each day. If things go well, we could see skill-based video game gambling machines at other casinos across the country.

Article: LINK
Video: LINK


Based on the video, it seems their aim is to eventually have entire casinos filled with these games, which I guess at that point it becomes... an arcade (but still a casino since gambling)? I don't know how I feel about this.
 
I imagine they add serious aim assist/desist or something. They have to get consistent odds somehow.
 
I'm fully expecting these to be call of duty on veteran hard bullshit
world-at-war-grenade-spam.jpg
 
They already do this to a certain extent in Vegas with the types of machines that have persistence and a sort of progress. A lot of the machines even feature the awesome soeaker systems that I remember being in the capcom machines back in the day. It's not a straight up first person shooter but they've been moving that way for a while.
 
Watch the endgame of this morph into the "skinner boxes" y'all rag on mobile gaming to be about, and then subsequently have both of them get regulated as gambling.

Actually, I wonder if part of the ploy of these machines is to skirt some regulation since elements of skill are involved.
 
I love how the person holding the controller doesn't have a clue what he's doing, moving the right thumbstick with the left thumb and all.
 
I was listening to a vegas related podcast a view weeks ago and apparently the industry is worried about the next generation of gamblers who grew up playing video games. They are afraid that the current games won't appeal to them. They are now looking towards hosting and sponsoring esport tournaments as well
 
So every fighting game will be like Blazblue's Unlimited Mars Mode, Every driving game will be in simulation mode with extremely accurate physics and no guide lines at all, and every first person shooter will be COD4 Mile high club on veteran.
 
Awesome!

I played an AC slot that had an optional skill-based bonus feature. I had to navigate a swimming turtle through rings and into gems. I absolutely nailed it with my mediocre video game skills!
 
I was listening to a vegas related podcast a view weeks ago and apparently the industry is worried about the next generation of gamblers who grew up playing video games. They are afraid that the current games won't appeal to them. They are now looking towards hosting and sponsoring esport tournaments as well
Can we get a link to this podcast? I'd like to have a listen to this conversation. The morning sports guys here in NY (WFAN) have been talking a lot about how business owners are becoming very interested in putting money into esports. The owners of the Brooklyn Nets have already had a few tournaments at Barclay's Center (if I'm not mistaken) and just over the weekend I read that the Philadelphia 76er's management has just purchased 2 esports teams.

EDIT: I just watched the video and aside from that dude having a seizure holding that controller, the female narrator just made the whole thing sound sleazy af! lmao. To translate: give us your money gamers, just TRY and win against the house.
 
Saw a write-up about this on Reddit a while back, funny to see it's made its way to GAF.

umm.... what is up with that guy holding/operating the controller?


reminds me of that one thread about bad videogaming in TV/movies.

I mean.... how can you be this bad at holding a controller?
Sure, not everybody is a gamer, but come on...you know how to hold a controller, right?

The video on the screens is "simulated gameplay." They're using b-roll from PC games and telling the person being filmed with the controller to pretend he's playing a game. With the way the footage is angled, he might even be looking at a blank screen or not in the same room as one of the "demo units."
 
I'm going to say something that may be controversial.

I'd rather have a gambling machine that's based around skill, in the context of a game, over the random chance of traditional gambling.

I mean, the fact you can "git gud" should surely put some advantage on the player.
 
I'm going to say something that may be controversial.

I'd rather have a gambling machine that's based around skill, in the context of a game, over the random chance of traditional gambling.

I mean, the fact you can "git gud" should surely put some advantage on the player.

But it'll be an illusion. These games will never reward you on being good, only slightly improve your odds. Just like those stacker games or crane games.
 
The video on the screens is "simulated gameplay." They're using b-roll from PC games and telling the person being filmed with the controller to pretend he's playing a game. With the way the footage is angled, he might even be looking at a blank screen or not in the same room as one of the "demo units."

N64 games didn't have you holding the control that goofily, and the controller had 3 holding positions. There is no defense, unless the person legit doesn't know wtf is going on
 
But it'll be an illusion. These games will never reward you on being good, only slightly improve your odds. Just like those stacker games or crane games.

This.

But you can actually be really good at the crane games. If you can catch a stuffed animal by dragging the claw and catching the collar or tag it doesn't matter as much if the machine tries to drop it or not. It depends on the machine too and if it will let you go drag the claw. I know a few people who can clean those machines right out.

Stacker is complete bullshit though.
 
Seriously surprised casinos haven't done this already... Make it like poker, a buy in, etc and the house takes a cut then just have people play each other. Zero way the casino can lose, and it takes the worries of "bullshit" games out.
 
I was listening to a vegas related podcast a view weeks ago and apparently the industry is worried about the next generation of gamblers who grew up playing video games. They are afraid that the current games won't appeal to them. They are now looking towards hosting and sponsoring esport tournaments as well

Link to this? Very curious about it, and my googlefu has failed me
 
reminds me of that one thread about bad videogaming in TV/movies.

I've been watching The Sopranos lately and they are surprisingly accurate with their videogames. They have the correct systems with the correct controllers, (plugged in even), with the correct games with the correct sounds and visuals around similar timeframes one might have actually owned these systems. I was truly surprised.
 
Gambling based on skill?

Read the post above you. They'd be a venue for people to bet on skill based games against other people and take a cut of the betting. Picture you put in $5 a CoD match and the house takes $10 and the winner takes the rest. Or a tiered pay-out structure (money back for 2nd place, etc). I assume they won't be some single player carnival game with the odds stacked against you. Feds wouldn't go for that and/or someone would eventually figure out some bug to cheese it and just win constantly.
 
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