- Casino
- By State
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Georgia
- Florida
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- Maryland
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
- By State
- Slots
- Poker
- Sports
- Esports
Fact-checked by Stoyan Todorov
OYO Hotel & Casino Las Vegas May Be Shuttering Its Table Games
The property is supposedly going to focus on slots fully, finding it a more sustainable and predictable business vertical

Table games are the very backbone of most casinos in Las Vegas and Nevada as a whole, yet one property is rumored to be dealing them a final hand. OYO Hotel & Casino Las Vegas will supposedly shutter all of its table games at the end of the month.
Live Dealers Let Go at End of October at OYO Hotel & Casino Las Vegas
Las Vegas Locally, a respected local media, which gets the inside scoop of such stories first, has confirmed that OYO management has told employees that they will be let go if they work in the live dealer table games part of the casino, for the most part, and the move is not entirely without its logic.
OYO Las Vegas previously reduced the operational hours of its table games to between 11 am and 3 am and is now most likely moving to shut operations completely. Some rumors live dealers had already been shuttered previously.
OYO Las Vegas, though, is not a random property, and it has cultivated a fair crop of table games players, especially blackjack. Off-ramping from table games is not exactly surprising. Golden Gate, another prominent casino destination, has already replaced its live dealer games with electronic variants, and the slump in live dealer employment is, in fact, noticeable well across Las Vegas.
Yet, the layoffs in the live dealer sector may be tied to the economic reality – the sector costs too much to maintain, and there has been a slump in tourist numbers. This is a U-turn from the 2020 post-pandemic period, when businesses were looking to train live dealers for free and quickly expand in the table games genre.
Related Topics:
Jerome brings a wealth of journalistic experience within the iGaming sector. His interest in the industry began after graduating from college, where he regularly participated in local poker tournaments. This exposure led him to the growing popularity of online poker and casino rooms. Jerome now channels all the knowledge he's accrued to fuel his passion for journalism, providing our team with the latest scoops online.
Must Read
Casino
October 9, 2025
New York Nears Pivotal Moment in Downstate Casino Race
Casino
October 10, 2025
Woman Steals $113K from Armored Vehicle Meant for Casinos
Casino
October 10, 2025
Keeping a Promise: Springfield Wants Back $3M in Casino Funds
More Articles
Sports
October 16, 2025
Greyhound Racing on the Chopping Block as Per New Federal Bill
Business
October 16, 2025
MGM Resorts to Sell MGM Northfield Park for $546M
Sports
October 16, 2025
Swifties Are Showing up at NFL Games and Engaging with the Sport
Industry
October 16, 2025
IGT’s Flagship Games Paid Out $6M in Jackpots in September
Casino
October 16, 2025
Mohegan Sun Launches New Sky Slot Tournament Zone
Casino
October 16, 2025
Victoria’s EGM Trial, Harshly Criticized Over Limits
Sports
October 16, 2025
Rising ID Fraud and Underage Gambling Hit Vegas Casinos
Legal
October 16, 2025
ATG Gets Major Fine after Appeal Court Backs AML Decision
Poker
October 16, 2025
Last Minute Bet on Polymarket Raises Suspicions of Insider Trading
Lottery
October 15, 2025
Michigan Man Wins Almost Half a Million from Fantasy 5