OPINION: Vegas isn't greedy. It's cruel.

At Papi Steak inside the Fontainebleau, you can order the Beef Case. A 55-ounce Australian wagyu tomahawk arrives in a diamond-studded briefcase. A server brands it tableside with a hot iron. Sparklers fire. The whole restaurant watches. It costs $1,000.
Nobody ordering the Beef Case thinks they're getting a thousand dollars' worth of steak. That's not the point. You're buying the spectacle of spending it while everyone watches.
The Beef Case is an honest transaction. Absurd, sure, but honest. You know what you're paying for. Everybody's in on it.
That honesty is exactly what the modern Strip killed. The old Strip let you in on the joke. The new one makes you the punchline.
Vegas always took your money. That was never a secret. But the old version of the deal had a second half that made losing feel like a fair trade.
You lost at the table and the pit boss comped your dinner. The room was cheap because the casino wanted you on the gaming floor. The buffet existed to keep you in the building, not to turn a profit on its own. The steak was $2 at Binion's Horseshoe because Benny Binion understood that a gambler who feels taken care of is a gambler who stays. The house always won in the long run, but it won by keeping you comfortable enough to keep playing.
And it worked on a level deeper than the economics would suggest. You went home and told your brother-in-law about the time you lost $500 and ate like a king. The losing was the price of admission to a weekend where you felt, maybe for the first time in months, like you were somebody.
The casino took your money and gave you a story worth telling. That story is what brought you back the next year, and the year after that.
Both sides knew the deal. Both sides got something out of it. That was the con, and it was a good one.
The new version of the deal keeps the losing part and cuts everything that made the losing tolerable.
You pay a $62-a-night resort fee just to exist in the building. You sit down at a 6:5 blackjack table not realizing that your odds of winning have dropped dramatically. Want the standard 3:2 blackjack that every casino on the Strip used to offer at a $5 minimum? Most resorts now charge $25 or more per hand for the traditional blackjack experience.
Call this what it is. A resort fee is a cover charge for a building you already paid to sleep in. The 6:5 payout is the casino betting you won't notice it changed the math further in its favor.
That's what makes this new era of Vegas feel less like greed and more like something meaner — like intended humiliation. It's not a bouncer turning you away at the door. That would at least be direct.
This is being let in and then made to feel, through a hundred small design choices, that you are not the customer they actually want. You're the customer they're willing to tolerate while they wait for someone who'll spend more to take your seat.
The old Strip made you feel like a high roller even when you weren't one. The new Strip makes sure you know exactly where you rank.
The Palms kept $5 blackjack and 3:2 payouts. Off-Strip and downtown casinos posted record revenue in 2025 while the Strip flatlined.
A customer who feels like they got a fair shake will come back and lose more money over a lifetime than a customer you squeezed dry in a single weekend. The old model understood that. The spreadsheet jockeys running the new Strip forgot it — or decided they didn't care.
Vegas used to give you a story. That was the whole business. The story is what brought you back because the house always wins. It used to have the decency to make you feel good about it.
Somewhere on the Strip right now, a visitor is sitting in a room they paid $261 a night for, knowing full well that $62 of it bought them nothing new, nothing extra. They're going to play blackjack at odds they don't realize have been changed. They're going to pay $19 for a beer and eat at a restaurant that used to be a buffet. And they're going to fly home in a few days and tell their brother-in-law it wasn't worth it.
Bryan Driscoll is a Las Vegas-based human resources consultant who advises employers on workforce compliance and legal risk.
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