Did you guys know that the exploding popularity of baccarat in Macau is causing problems for casinos?
Gambling innovators are betting on creating culturally-specific slot machines and computerised games to lure Asian players away from well-worn seats at the baccarat tables to more profitable pursuits.
In the face of rocketing labour costs and a need to diversify gaming revenue away from the traditional table game, casinos in the gaming haven of Macau are hoping the new designs will recreate the success of slots in Las Vegas.
"There are plenty of games in the market with themes on Star Wars, Spiderman and the like," said Tony Tong, chief executive officer of PacificNet, a gaming technology company.
"Asian people know about these stories but they do not have an emotional or cultural attachment," he told AFP, on the sidelines of Global Gaming Expo Asia, at Macau's vast Venetian casino resort.
Tong said computerised games needed to use stars such as martial arts actor Jackie Chan, and singers from the hit television series "Super Voice Girls," the Chinese equivalent of "American Idol".
Tong, who is a major supplier to casinos owned by Macau's gaming tycoon Stanley Ho, said although some games were linked to late kung fu star Bruce Lee and ancient Chinese stories such as the Monkey King, they had become outdated for Asian gamblers.
Tong's company employs 500 game designers and engineers in Macau, Hong Kong and China aiming to outdo foreign rivals. If he succeeds he will meet a much-needed shift in the southern Chinese city's model, as the tripling of croupier salaries in recent years has pressured casinos' bottom line.
While gaming revenues in Macau last year overtook those of the Las Vegas Strip, government figures show up to 88 percent of it was spent on baccarat tables, where one dealer can only serve a maximum 12 players at any one time.
Chinese gamblers tend to congregate around tables they feel are on a lucky streak, with tables nearby standing empty, cutting into casino profits.
Government figures show that only 4.3 percent of the city's total revenues were from slot machines, compared to what Tong says is as much as 60 percent in Las Vegas.



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