Are 
	mini-casinos the future of gambling?
	
	When people think of casinos, the first 
	thing that springs to mind is usually a large-scale building (often an 
	integrated resort) with luxury and excess as the primary features, or 
	perhaps an online casino site where you can play from the comfort of your 
	home. But a new form of 
	
	casino betting is being trialled in Pennsylvania. They're 
	dispensing 10 casino licenses for smaller 'mini-casinos' with a greatly 
	reduced floor space and without the hotel element of an integrated resort. 
	The reaction to Pennsylvania's decision has been mixed, to say the least - 
	are mini-casinos going to be the future of casino? 
	 
	
	
	 
	
	The evolution 
	of casino legislation
	
	With fluctuating legality issues and 
	public perception, casinos have seen a rise in popularity and presence over 
	the last 100 years. In America, casinos were first legalised in Nevada in 
	the 1930s and after the success story of Las Vegas, a number of other states 
	began to legalise casinos in order to bring in greater traffic from outside. 
	One of the slowest adopters was Pennsylvania: it took several years to fully 
	license casinos - starting in 1993 with efforts to legalise gambling on the 
	state waterways. There was considerable pushback from residents and a 
	governor who refused to act without the consensus of the people. Eventually, 
	in 2004, legislators passed Act 71 which is also known as the
	
	
	Pennsylvania Racehorse Development and Gaming Act. This would 
	legalise the use of casinos across the state and the financial benefits were 
	soon seen. During the first full year of operation, the state saw tax 
	revenues to the tune of  $766 million dollars - the only area that saw more 
	income from gambling was 
	
	Nevada itself!
	
	A part of this is down to the evolving nature of casinos. While the first 
	casinos were saloon bars, it wasn't long before they began to evolve into 
	luxurious integrated resorts. These resorts appealed to the type of high 
	rollers that Las Vegas was after and led to the current trend for casinos to 
	be glamorous holiday destinations with gambling supplemented by the 
	outstanding facilities and attractions. The expansion of integrated resorts 
	has spread into Asia, with Macau and Singapore prime examples of how 
	attractive the casino market is when it's attached to such a tourist-focused 
	industry as hotels. Casino legislation has been an ever-evolving and 
	improving market, and with online gaming in particular driving the industry 
	forward, it's predicted that the value of the online gaming industry is 
	going to increase this year to 
	
	$700 billion. Frequent innovations and a competitive global 
	market place driven by who can offer the best welcome offer, or sports the 
	coolest 
	
	casino games app, keeps the industry improving. But it's not just 
	online, physical casinos are constantly trying to improve as well which 
	leads us on to Pennsylvania's latest initiative.
	 
	
	The creation of 
	mini-casinos
	
	By Pennsylvanian Law, there were three 
	different categories of casino that you could be licensed for, with 
	mini-casinos now raising the number to 
	
	four. A category 1 casino or 'racino' is intended to boost the 
	state's horse racing industry by combining the thrill of the racetrack with 
	the glamour of a casino - a category 1 can have as many as 250 table games 
	and 5,000 slot machines. Category 2, or a standalone casino, is a building 
	dedicated solely to being a casino but without the racetrack element and has 
	the same limit on table games and slot machines. A category 3 is one of the 
	aforementioned integrated resort hotels, which have a stricter limit on what 
	they can and can't include, with a restriction on how many of each type of 
	game they can have, i.e. only 600 slot machines and 50 table games. 
	
	The newest category, category 4, is called either a mini-casino or a 
	satellite casino and is even more limited than category 3 (with 300 to 750 
	slot machines and up to 30 table games). According to the
	mini-casino legislation they also cannot 
	be within a certain distance of the existing category 1, 2 or 3 casinos, 
	which limits where they can be opened. Despite all these restrictions, the 
	ten licenses on offer have been in high demand with many companies eager to 
	try out one of these smaller creations. But the response from locals and 
	some in the industry has been mixed.
	
	A number of local towns, in classic 'Nimby' style, have
	
	
	opted out of having a casino built in their area but there are a 
	fair few still keen to host one of the new casinos. According to Alan 
	Woinski, editor of the Gaming Industry Daily Report "The 
	whole Northeast gaming market is saturated." Rather than 
	improving the economy, he expects the new casinos will cannibalise existing 
	revenue and lead to fewer  tourists for individual casinos. Whether or not 
	his fears are well founded remain to be seen, but the belief appears to be 
	held by a few operators as only 
	
	half of the licenses have been auctioned off at the date  of 
	writing.
	
	So, are mini-casinos the future? It's still not clear, Pennsylvania's 
	experiment has yet to be completed, but if the smaller businesses prove 
	helpful for the economy, you can be sure that other states will soon follow 
	suit. But how about you? Are you interested in giving mini-casinos a shot? 
	Let us know in the comments!