Living in a Casino Hotel
Posted: Tue Apr 18, 2017 11:13 pm
This is a mini trip report, of sorts.
Due to a job transfer, my spouse and I relocated to an area that has a LOT of tribal casinos.
Without boring you all with details of the relocation package with my employer, it is enough to know that the employer paid full "settling in" costs for several months, which included hotel and all meals. After that "settling in" period, we were on our own to either buy a home, rent an apartment, or continue living in a hotel.
We lived in a casino hotel for nearly one full year.
All of our household goods/furniture were in storage by the employer hired national van lines company.
We lived in a very nice junior suite at this hotel, which included a sofa, dining area, fireplace, and an enormous balcony with unbelievably gorgeous views.
The downside: living in a hotel for almost a year with a casino just an elevator ride down from our suite.
I used to joke with my casino host at the M Resort in Vegas that I am a "gambling degenerate." I absolutely love playing blackjack and video poker.
So, you would think that we set ourselves up on this move, by choosing this particular casino hotel.
It became an exercise in discipline, first, and then eventually devolved into maximizing our comps just to see what we can gain from this little adventure.
At the end of it all, here are my conclusions:
(1) You are not going to win a fortune in a large tribal owned casino.
(2) You are going to doubt the honesty and integrity of the video poker machines.
(3) You CAN maximize comps, and live in a casino hotel for a very long time. Even factoring in our losses in the casino, we actually lived very well, cheaper than had we rented an apartment, plus we had virtually free meals all month long. Moreover, our lovely suite came with free internet, free housekeeping service whenever we wanted (this was a full service hotel), absolutely nothing to maintain or fix, AND free breakfast guaranteed, that wasn't part of "comps."
(4) You WILL get tired of gambling. Again, as a self-professed gambling degenerate, having a casino just below the hotel seemed like fun at first, but it gradually turned into boredom. It reached the point where my spouse and I debated whether it was worth riding the elevator downstairs just to pick up our free play. Yeah, it got that bad. Plus, read conclusion #2 above.
(5) Repeat. Read conclusion #2 above.
Incidentally, the hotel staff were outstanding and we would have a "do over" of the year, if we could.
Due to a job transfer, my spouse and I relocated to an area that has a LOT of tribal casinos.
Without boring you all with details of the relocation package with my employer, it is enough to know that the employer paid full "settling in" costs for several months, which included hotel and all meals. After that "settling in" period, we were on our own to either buy a home, rent an apartment, or continue living in a hotel.
We lived in a casino hotel for nearly one full year.
All of our household goods/furniture were in storage by the employer hired national van lines company.
We lived in a very nice junior suite at this hotel, which included a sofa, dining area, fireplace, and an enormous balcony with unbelievably gorgeous views.
The downside: living in a hotel for almost a year with a casino just an elevator ride down from our suite.
I used to joke with my casino host at the M Resort in Vegas that I am a "gambling degenerate." I absolutely love playing blackjack and video poker.
So, you would think that we set ourselves up on this move, by choosing this particular casino hotel.
It became an exercise in discipline, first, and then eventually devolved into maximizing our comps just to see what we can gain from this little adventure.
At the end of it all, here are my conclusions:
(1) You are not going to win a fortune in a large tribal owned casino.
(2) You are going to doubt the honesty and integrity of the video poker machines.
(3) You CAN maximize comps, and live in a casino hotel for a very long time. Even factoring in our losses in the casino, we actually lived very well, cheaper than had we rented an apartment, plus we had virtually free meals all month long. Moreover, our lovely suite came with free internet, free housekeeping service whenever we wanted (this was a full service hotel), absolutely nothing to maintain or fix, AND free breakfast guaranteed, that wasn't part of "comps."
(4) You WILL get tired of gambling. Again, as a self-professed gambling degenerate, having a casino just below the hotel seemed like fun at first, but it gradually turned into boredom. It reached the point where my spouse and I debated whether it was worth riding the elevator downstairs just to pick up our free play. Yeah, it got that bad. Plus, read conclusion #2 above.
(5) Repeat. Read conclusion #2 above.
Incidentally, the hotel staff were outstanding and we would have a "do over" of the year, if we could.