I guess I have a different view on the "family" aspect of casinos. Here the gambling age is 18, and in nearby Minnesota it's 19. I grew up going to bingo with my grandmother. Before I was old enough for the casinos I'd play cards (blackjack, gin rummy) with her at home. Once I was old enough to go to the casinos it was a family outing - me, my mother, my grandmother. Not suggesting that they should let kids into the casinos mind you, and before I was of age I never set foot in one. But if I'm at a casino, there's either a family member or my fiance with me.
As for the stress and anxiety aspect, I can tell you that some people get very, very stressed with bingo. The pain of being ONE NUMBER AWAY for call after call after call - argh! I think that's why there are 2 words that you hear most frequently at regular bingo halls - one is Bingo, the other has one letter less.
Personally I don't think that a casino would necessarily have to break the theming or the family-friendliness of the cruise. They already have an adults-only section, they could (on newly designed ships) expand that area and put the casino there. That way there's no chance of the kids walking past it at all, they don't even need to know it's there.
I think they can theme it to Pirates of the Caribbean. Dim the lights a little so that it's kinda dusky, have lots of palm fronds and the natural look to the tables etc. Twinkle lights. Tropical music. Costumes for the CMs. Lower the volume a little on the machines so they're not blaring, that would be nice. I think a properly themed casino could be a LOT of fun, and if anyone at all knows how to do theming right it's Disney. And anything that will increase revenues for DCL so they can lower the prices to be more in line with other cruise lines is a good thing, as long as it doesn't detract from the overall experience. I think a nicely separated, properly themed casino wouldn't need to detract at all.
And for those who associate casinos with flashing neon and half-naked women dancing on tables, that isn't even indicative of half of Las Vegas these days. Believe it or not you can find class in a Las Vegas casino (Venetian, Monte Carlo, Mirage, Bellagio etc). And there's a whole slew of casinos outside of Nevada that do quite well with no strippers, no dancing girls, and in some cases no liquor.
As for the stress and anxiety aspect, I can tell you that some people get very, very stressed with bingo. The pain of being ONE NUMBER AWAY for call after call after call - argh! I think that's why there are 2 words that you hear most frequently at regular bingo halls - one is Bingo, the other has one letter less.
Personally I don't think that a casino would necessarily have to break the theming or the family-friendliness of the cruise. They already have an adults-only section, they could (on newly designed ships) expand that area and put the casino there. That way there's no chance of the kids walking past it at all, they don't even need to know it's there.
I think they can theme it to Pirates of the Caribbean. Dim the lights a little so that it's kinda dusky, have lots of palm fronds and the natural look to the tables etc. Twinkle lights. Tropical music. Costumes for the CMs. Lower the volume a little on the machines so they're not blaring, that would be nice. I think a properly themed casino could be a LOT of fun, and if anyone at all knows how to do theming right it's Disney. And anything that will increase revenues for DCL so they can lower the prices to be more in line with other cruise lines is a good thing, as long as it doesn't detract from the overall experience. I think a nicely separated, properly themed casino wouldn't need to detract at all.
And for those who associate casinos with flashing neon and half-naked women dancing on tables, that isn't even indicative of half of Las Vegas these days. Believe it or not you can find class in a Las Vegas casino (Venetian, Monte Carlo, Mirage, Bellagio etc). And there's a whole slew of casinos outside of Nevada that do quite well with no strippers, no dancing girls, and in some cases no liquor.
, which most here view as the Anti-Cruise. A floating sin-fest. Casinos, alcohol and neon-lights. The horror. And on those ships I've been on, we've never had to walk through the casino to get anywhere, however I can't speak for other lines.
It's still gambling.


