The Clubhouse Casino Table and Live Games

From Reels to Tables
Reels and tables ask for different things. A slot is a quick read of risk: pick a stake, spin, react. A table game asks you to set a position and then act on it, hand after hand. Neither is harder than the other, but they fill different moods.
Most members keep two or three games in rotation. The list below maps each style to the feeling it delivers, so you can match the table to the time you have.
Game | Style | Good for |
|---|---|---|
Roulette | Even tempo, one decision per round | Relaxed sessions and small repeated bets |
Blackjack | Quick hands, simple choices | Players who like control over each move |
Poker | Read the board, play the odds | Longer, focused sittings |
Keno | Hands-off, steady rhythm | Casual play in the background |
Live baccarat | Pick a side, watch it land | Members who want streamed action |
Roulette
Roulette is the easiest table to read. You place chips on numbers, colors or ranges, the wheel spins, and the ball settles. European single-zero wheels sit alongside American double-zero layouts, and the single-zero option keeps the house edge lower.
New members often start on the outside bets. Red or black, odd or even, and the dozen and column groups all pay close to even money and land often enough to keep a session moving. Inside bets on single numbers pay far more and hit far less, so spread them only with money you have set aside to lose.
Set a stake you can repeat for thirty rounds and you have a calm hour of play. The cashier accepts deposits from $20, so a small bankroll stretches across plenty of spins.
Blackjack
Blackjack is the thinking player's quick game. You and the dealer both draw toward 21 without going over. Hit, stand, double or split, and every choice has a correct answer based on your cards against the dealer's up card.
Because the right play is fixed by the math, Blackjack rewards a steady approach more than a hunch. Learn the basic moves for hard hands, soft hands and pairs, and the edge against you stays small. Multiple seat counts and side bets are available, and the live tables let you play the same hands against a dealer on camera.
Keep your bet flat while a bonus is active. The maximum bet during bonus play is $5, and table hands move fast enough to cross that line if you raise without watching.
Poker
Poker on the floor covers the formats where you face the house rather than a full table of opponents. Casino hold'em, three card and similar games let you ante, see your cards, then bet or fold against the dealer's hand. The pace suits a longer, focused sitting where each decision carries weight.
Strategy here leans on knowing which starting hands play forward and which fold cheaply. Discipline saves more chips than any clever raise. Members who enjoy Poker tend to settle in for an hour or more, reading each board and pacing their stack.
Keno
Keno is the gentlest style on the floor. Pick your numbers, let the draw run, and watch the matches land. There is little to decide once the round starts, which makes it the easiest game to play while you do something else.
The steady rhythm is the draw. Rounds arrive on a regular clock, prizes pay by how many numbers you catch, and a small ticket lasts a while. For members who want low stakes and a hands-off pace, Keno fits between heavier sessions at the tables.
The Live Dealer Floor
The live wing runs on Evolution, the studio that sets the standard for streamed tables. Real dealers deal real cards from a studio, you bet through the screen, and the round plays out in front of you with no software shuffle.
Live baccarat anchors the floor. Bet on the player, the banker or a tie, and the dealer turns the cards while you watch. It is one of the simplest bets in the building, which is why it suits members who want streamed action without a rulebook.
Game shows sit alongside the classic tables. Spin-the-wheel formats and prize-multiplier rounds bring a host, a studio set and bonus segments that pay above the base game. They land between a slot and a table in feel, fast and bright but hosted live. Live tables open and close on a schedule, so the floor is busiest in the evening.
How Table Games Count Toward Wagering
Bonuses carry a playthrough requirement, and not every game clears it at the same rate. Slots almost always count 100 percent toward wagering. Table and live games count less, and some clear at a low rate or not at all.
This matters when a bonus is in play. Welcome wagering runs at 40x, so clearing it on tables alone takes far longer than on slots because each dollar wagered counts for a fraction.
Slots: full contribution toward the 40x requirement.
Roulette, Blackjack and Poker: reduced contribution; check the terms on the active offer.
Live tables: reduced or excluded, depending on the game.
A simple plan works for most members: clear bonus wagering on slots, then move to the tables once the balance is real cash. That way the table session is pure play, with no contribution math running in the background. The maximum bet of $5 still applies until the bonus is fully cleared, so confirm your balance is unrestricted before you raise your stake at the felt.


