Stardust Casino
Get directions, reviews and information for Stardust Casino Office in Lake Charles, LA. Stardust Casino Office 1922 Sam Houston Jones Pkwy Lake Charles LA 70611. Reviews (337) 439-9764. Playing Stardust Social Casino games does not offer 'real money gambling' or an opportunity to win real money or prizes. Practice or success at social social gaming does not imply future success at 'real money gambling.' The award, use, and redemption of B Connected Points may be subject to state restrictions; see Stardust Social Casino. Echelon (originally Echelon Place) was a proposed $4.8 billion mixed-use project that was to be built on the Las Vegas Strip in Winchester, Nevada. Boyd Gaming announced the project in January 2006, as a replacement for its Stardust Resort and Casino. Get the best deals on Stardust Casino when you shop the largest online selection at eBay.com. Free shipping on many items Browse your favorite brands affordable prices.
The Stardust was a beloved Las Vegas casino, and fans looking for a fix can now download a free social app named after the iconic resort, Stardust Social Casino.
The Stardust app is free to play and available on iOS and Android mobile platforms.
Do not ask why three of Boyd’s casinos—Main Street Station, Fremont and The Cal—somehow got on The Strip. It’s Stardust magic.
A casino app serves a number of purposes for a casino company. It gives casinos a platform to market to their customers, of course, but in the case of a social app, the hope is also to already be on player smartphones when social casinos can serve as real online casinos, with actual money involved.
Online casinos are already legal in a few states, including New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and West Virginia. Actually, it’s not “including.” That’s it.
Online casinos aren’t yet legal in Nevada. Thanks, Uncle Sheldon. (The casino mogul has lobbied relentlessly against legalizing any form of Internet gambling.)
Boyd Gaming has a number of brick-and-mortar casinos in Pennsylvania and other states, so the opportunity to make the Stardust app a new source of gambling revenue is not too far down the road.
The Stardust app takes care to note: “The games do not offer real money gambling or an opportunity to win real money or prizes. Practice or success at social casino gaming does not imply future success at real money gambling.”
For now, anyway.
Fun fact: The Orleans, a Boyd Gaming casino, has a number of active slot machines rescued from the Stardust.
The resurfacing of the Stardust name is bittersweet, of course.
The Stardust opened on July 2, 1958 and was purchased by Boyd Gaming in 1985.
Stardust closed on November 1, 2006. It was imploded on March 13, 2007, to make way for a new Boyd Gaming project, Echelon Place.
Echelon Place was abandoned in 2008 due to the economic downturn, and is now the site of Resort World.
In hindsight, Stardust was closed and demolished for no good reason, but Vegas was built on short memories, so let’s put all that behind us and Stardust again.
The Stardust Social Casino is touted as being a way for loyalty club members to get rewards and benefits at Boyd Gaming casinos across the country, along with the enjoyment of the games themselves.
While social games are free, they offer players ways to purchase credits. Those purchases will earn points and Tier Credits within the B Connected loyalty club program.
The app has a fair number of game options, many immediately recognizable to slot fans.
Boyd Gaming Stardust
We count 16 games to start. That should keep you busy.
B Connected loyalty club members will want to log in with their member number right up front in case any of those promised perks come to pass. There’s also the option to play as a “Guest.”
Prior to entering the social casino proper, there’s a spin to get credits, a clever incentive for players to use the app daily.
The gameplay is fairly straightforward, but here’s a quick tutorial: 1) Push “Spin.” 2) Repeat.
Please feel free to review our tutorial prior to downloading the app.
Shout-out to some graphic designer with carpal tunnel right now.
Each game has the option to see more information about paytables and game rules. From what we could see, the games are pretty true to the real world versions of the slots.
“Free social casino” may not precisely describe the Stardust app, or any social app, really. First, “social” games aren’t social. It’s you and your phone. Second, slots are just one part of a casino. Third, the games are only free if you play until you’re out of credits and stop.
Social casino games make a surprisingly large amount of money from people buying virtual credits, despite the fact there’s no monetary benefit of doing so. You can only get a virtual jackpot with virtual credits.
On the bright side, you don’t have to pay taxes on a virtual handpay.
No, not everyone purchases virtual credits. They don’t need to. If just one percent of customers purchase credits, it can generate a hefty amount of revenue. We’ve always said gambling is about the fun, not the winning and losing, and virtual credits keeps the fun flowing.
Don’t laugh. You blow $20 in a real casino in two minutes.
While the Stardust app is being touted as “new,” there was actually another attempt to relaunch the Stardust brand online in the form of a Facebook app in 2013. (See photo, below.)
The Stardust Facebook app was available in the U.K., Canada and Australia, but a U.S. version failed to materialize, as far as we know.
Stardust Casino Game
The first attempt at a Stardust virtual casino imploded.
Check out Boyd Gaming’s new Stardust Social Casino app and let us know what you think.
Social casino apps are a way to stay connected to Vegas and your favorite games, even when you can’t be in Vegas.
Thousands of people try to steal money from the casinos on an almost daily basis, but these people generally get caught and have to serve time for their actions.
Bill Brennan somehow managed to steal $500,000 from the Stardust Casino in Las Vegas and the authorities have yet to find out exactly what has happened to him.
The most amazing part of this whole situation is the fact that Bill Brennan stole from the Stardust in such an unconventional way. He didn’t use violence or any weapons to steal from the casino, nor did he use any advanced tools or technology either. He simply took the money and left.
Almost twenty-four years later, and this whole ordeal still remains an unsolved mystery. In order to understand the crime Bill committed, we must travel back in time over twenty years ago to the year 1992.
It’s safe to say that twenty plus years ago, the Stardust wasn’t overly concerned with protecting their assets. Yes, they may have had some security officers and they may have had some cameras looking over the facilities, but none of it compares to the measures that they go through today.
Casinos were also a lot more trusting of their employees, which made them vulnerable for such attacks.