Mrs. smooth and I, as players club members, got offered one free night with one paid night. For years, free nights in Reno did not include a resort fee, but for this trip and our April 2018 free nights at nearby Grand Sierra Resort, the fine print stated that a resort fee is charged on free nights. Which I heartily disapprove of paying!
Our room rate for Wednesday was $65, not including the $28.25 resort fee, $8.45 tax, and $2 in tourism surcharges.
The room amenities include a coffeemaker with two regular and two decaf coffees, two green tea bags, a safe, bathroom scale, iron, two 12-oz. bottles of water, two alarm clocks that each have 2 USB/power outlets, and of course, a television.
The resort’s amenities include an indoor pool, outdoor pool, outdoor jacuzzi, a pool bar, spa, and a weight room with melon water and fruit. The arcade at the time had two pinball machines, Star Wars (Stern 2017) and The Walking Dead, which a technician was cleaning. I asked if he operates other pinball machines in the area, and he said he’s an Atlantis employee.
One of the great bargains at Atlantis is the “happy hour” at Bistro Napa restaurant. From 4 to 6 p.m., food and drinks in the bar area are half off, which is amazing for the high quality food and alcohol. People line up at 4 p.m. to get a table or spot at the bar. After checking in, we moseyed over at 5:20 p.m. The hostess put our name on the list, but warned that we might not get a table before 6 p.m. They have a strict last call for half-off pricing. We did not get a table.
We had dinner instead at the Sky Terrace Restaurant, which features seafood combination dinners, seafood stews, and an all-you-can-eat sushi option. This restaurant used to be our go-to location for dinner, but the quality has declined over the years. We were greatly disappointed with the sushi in our 2016 visit. This time, perhaps because we were hungry, we were satisfied. But upon reflection, I felt like the sushi rice was too dense, and the fish flavor was bland. My prawns and scallops in a sweet cream broth was good, but a tad too sweet.
Nobody was playing poker on Tuesday night, so we wandered around and played one of two Iron Man slot machines. I thought all slot themes that are now part of the Disney family (Marvel comics, Star Wars, and Indiana Jones) were long gone, so it added to the curiosity value. The machine is pretty but boring!
We moved over to the Pai Gow Poker table for no-stress gambling. Usually I get pretty amped up about wagering, but this time we played leisurely for about an hour, chatted with a local player who the dealer recognized, and enjoyed some cocktails. Our fellow player got quads for $200 in bonuses. I flat-betted $5 the entire time and finished ahead $9.50.
The next day, I had $2.43 in comps in my player card, which I applied toward a coffee. I also asked the players club rep for a deck of canceled playing cards, which the pit boss stated they might have. They did!
We did a lot of swimming during our stay. The indoor pool is round and larger than the outdoor rectangular pool, which is deeper. At the pool bar, I ordered a piña colada (which I like), and the bar attendant made enough for two drinks, so she gave me both. I gave the other to Mrs. smooth, who gave it to the guest she was chatting with, who gave it to her daughter. Everybody’s happy!
That night, we arrived at Bistro Napa promptly at 4 p.m. and had an excellent dinner as usual. I had a Sidecar cocktail. Later, we played $1-$2 no-limit hold’em, and I had another Sidecar. Guess which one was better? We helped start a new table, and I wound up winning $120, the bulk of which came late after bluffing two hands. I think my bluffs worked because of a tight image I projected early on. I contemplated for a relatively long time whether to call a $20 bet on the turn with about $40 in the middle. I had an outside straight draw, and I actually forgot how to compute pot odds! So I folded. In another hand, I projected a value bet on the river in which I had paired the board, but there was also a set on the board. It was enough to beat the caller, who was the person who later folded to two of my river bluffs. In one hand, I projected a made flush by calling/raising $15 on the river.
Poker at Atlantis earns $4/hour, so the next morning, I had $4.95 in comps. For our gambling that day, I wanted to play a 9-6 JoB quarter machine with a small progressive jackpot. I finished down $20, but Mrs. Smooth hit quad 10s. Later, I played the old Max Action slot machine, got a bonus round on my first spin, and finished ahead $24.20.
One final note, I noticed the sportsbook now features baseball betting on whether a team will score in the first inning—an intriguing bet!
For those who are interested in a certain style of early 2000s IGT video slot machines, Atlantis had these machines:
Alien
Deep Pockets
Lucky Larry’s Lobstermania
Money Storm
Mystical Mermaid
Pharoah’s Fortune
Sea Monkeys
Stinkin’ Rich
Tabasco
Twin Win
The Grand Sierra sits on the shore of the Truckee River, which bisects downtown Reno, and is two minutes from the international airport. https://luckyidentity.netlify.app/borgata-online-casino-live-chat.html. One of the largest casino floor spaces at 90 000 square feet, the Grand Sierra casino provides plenty of opportunities for slots, tables, video poker and race and sports book play.
Prior to that they had a soap bar which cost them $150 per pot which they had to order several times a day. Plus they comped anyone playing poker off the poker menu after just one hour of play. They did the math and they are making more money giving out $4 an hour vs the old system. Plus they have good promotions in the poker room. Best promo is when they pay out the high full house for the hour. Sometimes there are only one or two tables going so it doesn't take much to win that $100. Plus if you are one of the top 50 hour accumulators for the quarter, you get actual cash back! I think $1000 for the top 5. That's ontop of your $4 an hour.
Thanks for the poker room suggestion! I thought Eldorado's $2/hour poker comp was pretty good. That poker room is gone now, moved to Silver Legacy.
My family and I stayed at Atlantis casino in Reno on the nights of Tuesday Aug. 24 and Wednesday Aug. 25.
Nice write up but an even more amazing use of a time machine! Plan to clean up soon using that I bet, eh?
Just ribbing. It's fairly obvious what your mistake was, but what is kind of funny is that you listed both the day of the week and the date and still made the error.

Nice write up but an even more amazing use of a time machine! Plan to clean up soon using that I bet, eh?
Just ribbing. It's fairly obvious what your mistake was, but what is kind of funny is that you listed both the day of the week and the date and still made the error.
GAH!!! Here's a perfect example of why people need editors! Or why they have DeLoreans.

I'm past the editable point, so allow me to correct here: we stayed on the nights of Tuesday, July 24 and Wednesday, July 25.
GAH!!! Here's a perfect example of why people need editors! Or why they have DeLoreans.
I'm past the editable point, so allow me to correct here: we stayed on the nights of Tuesday, July 24 and Wednesdayu, July 25.
Value and representation. The value of an item with an integral type is the mathematical integer that it corresponds to. Integral types may be unsigned (capable of representing only non-negative integers) or signed (capable of representing negative integers as well). An integer value is typically specified in the source code of a program as a sequence of digits optionally prefixed with + or −. Basic types Main types. The C language provides the four basic arithmetic type specifiers char, int, float and double, and the modifiers signed, unsigned, short, and long.The following table lists the permissible combinations in specifying a large set of storage size-specific declarations. Unsigned integers slots machine. Slots and signals are identified by their names (when you do use SLOT(setpwm(unsigned long)) in your code, you are constructing a string). You can simply store the name and the object and then call the slot using QMetaObject. You can use pointers to member functions in C (see the C faq), but in this case I'd suggest to use Qt's meta object system. Katrina Bookman captured national attention last year when she played a 'Sphinx Slot Machine' at Resorts World Casino in Queens, New York, and it appeared as though she'd won $43 million - which would have been the largest jackpot ever won on the slots in U.S.
We know what days you meant
During our last stay, we complained about never having to pay resort fees on comped nights, and got the fee waived.
nice enough, we never checked out rooms in atlantis, but we enjoyed playing there and eating there in the little restaurant overlooking the slot/casino floor
they send us free comped nights, but its big trip for one night comp...we enjoyed the gaming there.
we had a rental car, we came outside, every car was white in the log, it took us 35 minutes to locate our car, it was funny, but not so funny before we found it.
Best Slot Machines At Gsr Reno 2018 Results
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Grand Sierra Resort Slot Machines
Well, you are in luck (pun intented), @Gene_The_Gamer ! Reno has dominated the title of 'Loosest Slots' for many years in row, and not just in Nevada, in the whole U.S.!! If I remember right, city-wide the return is about 95% on all slots, which certainly gives the gamer a fair fighting chance!
Here are the casinos with the highest rates of returns:- The Silver Legacy
- The Eldorado
- The Atlantis
- The Peppermill
- The Grand Sierra
- The original Harrah’s
A great website that I found that might be helpful is: http://www.casinocenter.com/loosest-slots-awards-2017/
It is one year out of date, but I bet that the numbers are pretty accurate, and they match my researched list above.
As for me personally, I have always had the best luck at The Peppermill and The Eldorado.
- edited January 2019
Yes, Max is correct. Per the Nevada Gaming Commission's statistics for the past 12 months, Reno did have the loosest slots in Nevada, with an overall casino win percentage of 5.24% at Reno's largest casinos, versus about 8% on the Las Vegas strip. That essentially means Vegas strip casinos retained about 3 percentage points more of cash in on slots than Reno casinos, which doesn't seem like much, but it's a big difference. Overall, the $5 and $1 slots were the most favorable for gamblers in Reno.
I haven't been to Reno in over a year, but I can confirm that I felt like my gambling dollar went pretty far playing mostly $1 slots and some 25 cent slots at both Atlantis and Harrah's -- or at least a lot further than it usually goes on the strip!
+1 for Atlantis, and also Harrah's for the loosest slots in Reno, although Caesars feel like it's getting tighter all over, so hopefully that doesn't carry over to Harrah's there. Reno is so competitive, though, they may not chance it.