Winstar Casino Craps Rules

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Winstar Casino Craps Rules Rating: 6,3/10 5390 votes

Pages Businesses Arts & Entertainment Casino WinStar World Casino and Resort Videos Craps is LIVE at WinStar World Casino and Resort. House Rules House rules for WinStar World Casino and Resort. All gaming patrons must be 18 years old to wager and/or be allowed in the gaming area; a valid State or Federal issued photo ID. must be provided upon request and at the discretion of Management.

Craps is LIVE at WinStar World Casino and Resort. WinStar World Casino and Resort. August 17, 2018 Craps - with REAL dice - is now LIVE on the gaming floor!

Wanderer
Anyone been to this casino on the Texas/Oklahoma border? If so, what do you think of it? I will be passing through the area in November and might stop by for a bit.
Puckerbutt
Buy some nice walking shoes. If you stay overnight and play poker - the hotel towers are over 15 minutes away after about a mile walk through the casino.
Table games - 50 cents per hand ante. This fee is never waived at any time at this location.
6300 slot machines. I forget what class, but I know some or all are based on bingo patterns.
Nice roomy poker room. 10% up to max $5 rake with $1 bad beat drop also. $1 of any small blind is dropped before the deal so if you play 1-2 No Limit then the small blind would lose that dollar in a chop situation. (Their poker room is on the Bravo Live app if you want to see what games are spread.)
Actually has a bingo room that I don't know anything about and also an off track betting room if you like the horses.
If'n I'd a knowed you wanted to have went with me - I'd a seen that you got to get to go.
FleaStiff
I hear Oklahoma has such raw deals that its better to just keep going and save your money for Vegas where you get more bang for your buck.
midwestgb
Lots of walking to see everything. Kinda neat for a one-off viewing. Video Poker offerings are sparse, and not particularly playable whatsoever.
Wanderer
What about their blackjack tables?
Dicenor33
Amazing poker. I believe this is the only place in America where people should play the game. No arm twisting by a bunch of crooks. When you hold the button, the pot is usually yours, you not facing seven freaks stealing your money.
teddys

Amazing poker. I believe this is the only place in America where people should play the game. No arm twisting by a bunch of crooks. When you hold the button, the pot is usually yours, you not facing seven freaks stealing your money.

I've heard these Southern Oklahoma casinos have amazing action. All that oil money coming up from Texas -- they are enormous gamblers. You can do very, very well down there.
'Dice, verily, are armed with goads and driving-hooks, deceiving and tormenting, causing grievous woe.' -Rig Veda 10.34.4
newshooter
While I have not been to this particular casino, I hear it gets A LOT of action from the Dallas / Ft. Worth area - no casino gambling in Texas (Boo!!!).
Another poster already mentioned it, but I will reiterate. To my knowledge, all OK casinos (unless during a particular promotion, etc.) charge an ante per hand. That means you pay a fee for each table game hand you play. For example, if you want to play blackjack at $5 a hand, you pay a separate $.50 for each hand you play. Average 60 hands per hour = $30 you are paying separate and apart from winnings / losses. What a rip-off and is why I refuse to give OK any of my action - on principle!
If you're travelling west, hold out for New Mexico or Colorado, where no ante per hand is expected. Likewise, if travelling east, Louisiana does not charge an ante per hand.
OK is also one of those states that doesn't allow dice games - craps is played with several modified decks of cards - Lameo!!!
My advice - keep going, regardless of direction!
Best of luck!
Wanderer

Another poster already mentioned it, but I will reiterate. To my knowledge, all OK casinos (unless during a particular promotion, etc.) charge an ante per hand. That means you pay a fee for each table game hand you play. For example, if you want to play blackjack at $5 a hand, you pay a separate $.50 for each hand you play. Average 60 hands per hour = $30 you are paying separate and apart from winnings / losses. What a rip-off and is why I refuse to give OK any of my action - on principle!


Seriously? A 50 cent ante for Blackjack? That's ridiculous. I've never even heard of that.
Quote:

If you're travelling west, hold out for New Mexico or Colorado, where no ante per hand is expected. Likewise, if travelling east, Louisiana does not charge an ante per hand.


I live within a couple of hours of several Mississippi casinos that offer good rules/conditions for a player like me. I'm not desperate enough to play bad conditions somewhere else. I was in Orlando this summer and drove over to the Seminole Hard Rock in Tampa to play one evening. I walked in and noticed that the Blackjack tables were all stocked with CSM's. I walked right out and drove back to Orlando without playing a hand.
I will be passing by the WinStar this November on a major midwestern road trip. I'm starting and ending in Dallas and will pass through Oklahoma. Even if the place had ideal rules/conditions, I wouldn't play for more than an hour or so before getting back on the road. As it is, from what people have said on this thread, I will probably just stop by and take a quick look around and then go on my way.
pokerface

Anyone been to this casino on the Texas/Oklahoma border? If so, what do you think of it? I will be passing through the area in November and might stop by for a bit.


In terms of number of slot machines, WinStar is the largest casino in the world. That is the only attraction they have.
If you want to actually play at any tables or machines, go to other states for a real casino.

Casino Craps Rules Point

winning streaks come and go, losing streak never ends.
PickMachine
So does anyone know what this truly means for the game of craps is it still traditional style where you can place bets on place numbers and win or is this some different type setup?
FleaStiff
I can't follow any of this stuff and doubt I would do better at following it after having some morning coffee.
I think the state is trying to get its money rather than let the casino get it. This appears to be a 'the money goes into a pool, the state takes its cut and then the casino can do any math it wants to do'. This avoids letting the casino be 'creative' prior to the state's getting its pint.
TigerWu
I saw a big billboard in town advertising craps and roulette 'coming soon' to the Hard Rock here.
I'll be there in a couple weeks for an event, and I'll try to get some more info on how it will all work (if no one here gets there before me).
TigerWu
Craps and Roulette are now live in Oklahoma.
I'm going to one of the casinos to check it out this weekend.
Puckerbutt
Thanks for this post from:

Craps and Roulette are now live in Oklahoma.
I'm going to one of the casinos to check it out this weekend.


Roulette is live at Riverwind Casino, but craps isn't. I only observed for a few seconds as I walked by but I didn't notice any 50-cent chips which was unusual as I've never seen any Chickasaw gaming property waive the ante. (Perhaps there is a loophole and the ante only applied when their version of roulette was card based?)
I'll be at Winstar (another Chickasaw property) the 22nd and 23rd and will check on what is available there if anyone is interested.
If'n I'd a knowed you wanted to have went with me - I'd a seen that you got to get to go.
Puckerbutt
I've been to the following Chickasaw properties within the past 24 hours and the rules were uniform.
Newcastle, Riverwind, and Winstar Roulette
Ante $1
Min Bet $5
Min Buy-in $20
Max Bets
$500 on outside 1 to 1 bets
$250 on outside 2 to 1 bets
$10 any way to the number inside

Winstar Casino Facebook

The following sign was at Riverwind only -
'Any spin that does not complete 4 rotations around the wheel will be considered a No Spin'
Winstar was the only one of the group that was setting up for craps and I saw 3 tables.
If'n I'd a knowed you wanted to have went with me - I'd a seen that you got to get to go.
klimate10
According to the person in charge at Winstar, there will be an ante per come out roll. The ante is $1.
If after paying the ante, the player has a winning 7/11 or losing 2,3,12, then the player must pay another ante to post the next pass line or DP bet.
A push on the DP is a decision and will require another ante.
After the ante is paid, if a point is established, the bettor may make any additional bets, whether the bets be Come bets, place bets, Hardways, field, etc, and may continue to post additional wagers, without paying another ante, until the player has a 7 out.
The game will be house banked, not player banked.
I have spoken to quite a few players from central Texas and surrounding areas who will not be deterred by this ante requirement. Their logic is that they would spend more money than the ante by flying to Las Vegas or driving to Shreveport, LA.
TigerWu


Newcastle, Riverwind, and Winstar Roulette
Ante $1
Min Bet $5
Min Buy-in $20


Those minimums aren't bad at all for Roulette, even with the ante. Still terrible odds, but at least it's cheap.
Noncompete
Have all of the Oklahoma converted to real craps and roulette? Also, IIRC the casinos only charge a $1 ante on the come out roll, which really hurts if a 2,3,7,11, or 12 is rolled since you immediately have to pay it again.
ThatDonGuy

Newcastle, Riverwind, and Winstar Roulette
Ante $1
Min Bet $5
Min Buy-in $20
Max Bets
$500 on outside 1 to 1 bets
$250 on outside 2 to 1 bets
$10 any way to the number inside

Doesn't sound promising for the $5 bettor - an even-money bet becomes 5-6, with a house edge (assuming a double-zero wheel) of 13.16%. $10 bets (10-11) drop it to 9.57%, and $25 bets (25-26) drop it to 7.09%.
You think that's bad? $5 on a single number (the payout is now 175-6, or just over 29-1) has a house edge of 20.61%.
Keep in mind that these numbers are based on making only one bet per spin.
Or does 'ante' not mean what I think it means - a fee for the privilege of betting, since this is how the casino makes its money?Rules
Quote: klimate10

According to the person in charge at Winstar, there will be an ante per come out roll. The ante is $1.
If after paying the ante, the player has a winning 7/11 or losing 2,3,12, then the player must pay another ante to post the next pass line or DP bet.
A push on the DP is a decision and will require another ante.
After the ante is paid, if a point is established, the bettor may make any additional bets, whether the bets be Come bets, place bets, Hardways, field, etc, and may continue to post additional wagers, without paying another ante, until the player has a 7 out.

Questions:
1. Does everybody pay the ante on the comeout, or just the shooter?
2. If (1) is 'everybody,' then can somebody avoid the ante by not betting on comeout rolls?
3. If (2) is 'no,' then how do they enforce this? Do the dealers put markers in front of the players that have paid the ante?