This card room might as well be a home game for the regulars.
Players openly discuss hands while multiple people are still in the pot and continue commenting even after they’re no longer involved. That behavior is routinely allowed. If you’re a regular, you clearly get special treatment and looser rule enforcement. If you’re new, good luck — you’re playing by a different set of rules.
Operationally, the room struggles. Tables are hard to get started and even harder to keep running. Most of the time you’re playing short-handed. On a good day, maybe one table is going. On most days, it feels like the room is barely hanging on.
The promotions are also terrible — weak, uninspiring, and nowhere near enough to justify showing up consistently or get excited about. There’s nothing that makes you want to come back or choose this room over others nearby. When combined with inconsistent rule enforcement and regulars run the room, it removes any real incentive to play here.
New employees often don’t seem fully trained, which only adds to the “anything goes” atmosphere. That lack of structure shows on the floor.
If you’re looking for a fair, well-run poker room, this isn’t it. If you’re part of the regular crowd and enjoy a loose, home-game vibe with selective enforcement, you’ll probably feel right at home.
Advice to ownership: There’s a reason people would rather drive to San Antonio or Austin to play. You built a nice room, and most of your staff are genuinely good to work with — but after a year and a half, it’s hard to believe this is what you envisioned. Get creative, fix the promotions, and tighten operations… or this room becomes a reminder of what could’ve been.



