Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Room
- Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Rooms
- Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Rooms Reopening
- Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Room After Coronavirus
- Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Rooms Open
Home; Categories. Poker Chips & Sets Poker Chips & Sets. High Roller Laser; Las Vegas Laser; Edge Spot Spade; Prestige Pro 727; Monte Carlo Millions; Monte Carlo Poker Room; Monte Carlo Poker Club. 100pcs 14g Monte Carlo Poker Room Casino Poker Chips 10000. $1000 Poker Chip Graded Las Vegas Monte Carlo Casino Club EMC Grading Slabbed. Part of Monte Carlo Las Vegas Resort and Casino. As part of the Monte Carlo's renovations, the poker room has closed. The Aria, however, also an MGM Resorts International property, offers a 24-table poker room featuring Limit and No Limit Hold'em, Omaha 8 or Better, Pot Limit Omaha, 7 Card Stud, Draw Games, Mixed Games, and tournament play.
Very comfortable room nice decore not overwhelming.Good location
near restrooms,bar,easy access to outdoors for fresh air.
Mix between experienced and inexperienced. 50/50 locals/tourists
Was able to increase my bankroll with a little patience.
Dealers were very friendly. Would have rated excellent but for one dealer who had two miss deals in a row at final table of a Hold Em tournment I was in.
Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Rooms
Played early in day between 9am -noon saw waitresses about every 45 min.
Mgt. was excellent kept tournment running smoothly,very outgoing
The best employees I came across at Monte Carlo
Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Rooms Reopening
Not sure was not an issue with me.
The Monte Carlo Casino in Las Vegas will be closing the doors to its poker room on April 25th.
As part of MGM Resorts International’s plans to rebrand and restructure the Monte Carlo into two new hotels, Park MGM and The NoMad Las Vegas, the venue is gradually shuttering its facilities.
The Monte Carlo Casino in Las Vegas will lose its poker room on April 25th ahead of a major redevelopment. (Image: montecarlo.com)
Back in October of 2016 the pool and various shopping outlets were closed and in the coming weeks the poker room will join them.
With eight tables and typical cash game limits running from $1/$2 to $3/$6, the Monte Carlo’s poker room is one of the smaller places to play on the Strip. However, it was thanks to its lower limits that it became known as a place for casual players.
Strip Revenue on the Up Means More Money to Invest
Despite that fact, MGM Resorts International has plans to build two new venues in 2018 and capitalize on what appears to be an upturn in the city’s tourist trade. According to the Nevada Gaming Control Board, state casinos pocketed $11.26 billion in 2016 which is getting close to the 2012 record ($12.85 billion).
Of that figure, the Las Vegas Strip contributed 56 percent, which suggests casinos in the area are starting to generate more revenue they can then use to reinvest in more developments. However, it seems as though poker isn’t high on the list of priorities.
When the Monte Carlo closes its poker room doors, the Strip and its surrounding areas will be left with just 19 poker rooms. At the time poker was reaching its peak and numbers at the WSOP were reaching record highs (2000-2007), Vegas had 26 poker rooms boasting a total of 396 tables.
Vegas Visitors Want More than Poker
Although Nevada poker revenue hit $117.8 million in 2016, with the Strip and surrounding areas contributing $78 million to that total, it’s a long way from the money made by casino games and other industries. In fact, part of the reason for a lack of interest in poker by casino owners is the growth in business and leisure tourism.
Monte Carlo Las Vegas Poker Room After Coronavirus
According to director of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA), Kevin Bagger, a record 42.9 million people visited the city in 2016. Contributing to that record was 6.3 million convention-goers (up by 7.1 percent) as well as tourists from Asia.
With more people visiting Vegas for things other than poker, Bagger said that reinvestments for infrastructure are typically geared towards “amenities people want” such as the T-Mobile Arena and SpeedVegas.
Although the new venues that replace the Monte Carlo will likely have some form of poker room, it seems they’ll take second place to other non-poker facilities.