najisami
Legend
Loyaler
The house, not the serving people.I would not tip in a place that the house is always winning hahahaha
The house, not the serving people.I would not tip in a place that the house is always winning hahahaha
I don't tip people for just doing their job, it's not up to me to pay their wages, that's their employers responsibility. I might give a tip for someone going above and beyond their job description to assist me. I find it disgusting that casino's that make a shitload of profit are not paying a fair wage to their employees.I like that and totally agree with you. We should always take care of people who work for tips, especially that the drinks are free in this case.
I think it doesn't go the same way everywhere. In certain countries, tips is a part of the popular culture.I don't tip people for just doing their job, it's not up to me to pay their wages, that's their employers responsibility. I might give a tip for someone going above and beyond their job description to assist me. I find it disgusting that casino's that make a shitload of profit are not paying a fair wage to their employees.
IMHO they should charge for drinks and pay their staff a fair wage.
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First of all i always tip. The amount depends on the service and attitudes from servers. Its hard to figure what a fair tip is, like Sami said its not the same in all countries. I've been in Casino's where its automatically added to your tab, if you are paying for Food ,drinks,and so on. The last place i visited,quite a few years ago added 3% to total in restaurants and Bars.I think it doesn't go the same way everywhere. In certain countries, tips is a part of the popular culture.
The amount depends on the service and attitudes from servers
If someone ask me to tip them, i would throw them a quarter of a dollar and tell them its rude to ask for tips.
No matter what the drink is, the topic is about gratuity.Hopefully you ment drinking a coke zero cause drinking alchool at the cassino is a receipe for disaster![]()
If they can't earn a living on the wages their employer pays them, then they have the option to find a better paying job. You'll find that tipping is mainly a Nth American thing.So, throwing a $1 or $2 chip in their trays would not hurt and helps them make a living.
Bro, you've already made it clear that tipping is not in your culture, nothing wrong with that. Tip or don't, it's up to you.If places had a service charge that went to the wait staff then I would have the option of using that establishments services or going somewhere else.
Are you insinuating that the discussion is over, I'm confused.Bro, you've already made it clear that tipping is not in your culture, nothing wrong with that. Tip or don't, it's up to you.
Sami is insinuating that we can agree to disagree. I myself will not tip if anyone asks me to tip. I tip with my own accord.Are you insinuating that the discussion is over, I'm confused.
I agree. My father worked in a casino & I know that their tip aka "for the boys" is a big part of their take home pay. But tip is an appreciation and not an entitlement.If they can't earn a living on the wages their employer pays them, then they have the option to find a better paying job.
I'm still curious as to what people in the few countries that have a tipping culture do when they get bad service, do they still tip because it is expected culturally.Sami is insinuating that we can agree to disagree. I myself will not tip if anyone asks me to tip. I tip with my own accord.
I agree. My father worked in a casino & I know that their tip aka "for the boys" is a big part of their take home pay. But tip is an appreciation and not an entitlement.
Are you insinuating that the discussion is over, I'm confused.
From my own experience, in those countries, when people don't like the service, some don't tip, but most do leave the minimum (about 15%) but complain.I'm still curious as to what people in the few countries that have a tipping culture do when they get bad service, do they still tip because it is expected culturally.
That's what I do actually. If I see that I can't tip, I don't ask for anything. I'd be embarrassed otherwise.At a casino, i tip if i am winning, if i am losing i ask for nothing
Thanks for the reply Sami, to me tipping someone for bad service is the opposite of what a tip should be for.From my own experience, in those countries, when people don't like the service, some don't tip, but most do leave the minimum (about 15%) but complain.
At least for me Nick, tipping is done based on how I viewed the service. If I show up on a weekend evening to a place I know to be really popular, then I expect the service to be slower & allow for that. Should the food be received as ordered, correctly prepared, the waiter checks on our table as often as he/she can, requests are taken care of in a prompt manner, then we tip appropriate to the service & most everyone take the time to thank the waiter for the good service. If the service is bad, we take our business elsewhere.I'm still curious as to what people in the few countries that have a tipping culture do when they get bad service, do they still tip because it is expected culturally.
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I always leave a tip unless the service was extremely poor.When playing any table game or Slots at a casino, drinks are obviously on the house.
Do you tip waitresses for every drink they bring you?
What if a waitress asked for it?