Welcome to Casino Planner.
Affiliates of online gambling please find the appropriate link above to get your own white label version of Casino Planner to offer your surfers.
Sponsors seeking info on the one ad space I have available for casinos facing the states, as well as one for those facing away, click on the link called “Advertising”.
What is the Casino Planner?
Casino Planner is much akin to the day planner, if you are old enough to remember when they were in vogue. Casino Planner allows you to keep track of all the casinos where you have played, as well as provides a novelty approach to finding out which casinos are providing you with the most fun.
Inside the Casino Planner you will find a list of casinos on the right side of the planner, which if you choose to download one of them, will automatically move that casino over to the left side of the notebook which is set up so you can do one of three things.
Rate your experience
in the casino for that session. Although any number system will work, as long as you stay uniform, in this instance we’ll use a system of
1 = Horrible time. Almost no wins at all. You went in and laid down your money and it kept up that way until you walked away and didn’t play any further.
2 = Bad time. The average bad day. You might have seen enough glimpse of a win to qualify for it not being a #1, but that’s the best you can say about it.
3 = Neutral. You guessed huh? This would be a break even kind of day.
4 = Good time. Perhaps you didn’t get a jackpot, but you came away with a lot more than you started, or at least had the chance to quit while way ahead.
5 = Great time. At least one jackpot experienced. Or great run of luck at the card or roulette table. The only thing today lacked was winning the lottery and date with your favorite hottie.
Use a 1 to 5 rating system , or perhaps 1 t0 3, good, even and bad. Any numbers will work as long as you always use the same set, but I would suggest to keep it simple as possible, perhaps 1 to 10 being the widest gap. The bigger your gap between best and worst, actually will only serve to confuse you when comes time to rate your session. Was it a 6, 7 or 8? Tough call. But if I asked you did you have a good, bad or neutral time? You could probably give me a ready answer. Just something to think about.
Or
Use the system to tell you how many times you could have walked away a winner. What I mean by that is often times we do win, but we stay too long and end up losing that, plus our stake money. While that isn’t a huge tragedy since most smart gamblers came with it in mind to lose whatever amount they saw fit to bring, it is an angle which shouldn’t be ignored if you’d like to get the most for your money. Wouldn’t it be nice to know which casino gave you the most opportunities to walk away a winner? Use the system to find out by simply adding a 1 every time you could have quit a winner, and enter a zero for the times you did not ever have the chance.
Or
Slot players may want to chart which casino has been giving them the most what I call, “nice wins”. These are the wins that are slightly less than a jackpot, but still enough to merit being noted in the back of your mind as one of the nice wins you had that day, which for most slot gamblers will be a number that can be counted on if not one hand, then certainly both. If you have more than ten nice wins per session, you’re either setting the bar too low, or one of the luckiest people ever.
In any of the above cases, once the information is provided, the result box will provide a number which the lowest will be the best casino for your needs.
For instance, say we had 20 sessions, each was rated a 3 for a total of 3 x 20 = 60, so then that number is divided into the amount of sessions, which in this case would return as .333
Now lets say the next casino we also played at 20 times. ( I am choosing same number of sessions to more easily show how this will work, but it works the same no matter whether the number of times you played in the casino, is different or the same. In this case you gave each experience a 4. 4 x 20 = 80 so we have 20 sessions divided by 80 ratings which the results would return as .25.
Finally our last casino also had 20 sessions played, but each of these was assigned the highest possible rating, so we get 20 x 5 = 100. 20 sessions divided by 100 would return in the results column as .2 and as you can easily see in this demonstration, the casino which provided the best fun, would be the one that had every session rated as a 5 (of course) so then you can see how the result number which is the lowest, will be the casino providing the best ratings, or most “nice wins” or the most chances to quit while a winner.
