In March, the AGA filed a petition to protest the gaming license bid by PokerStars’ parent company the Rational Group aka that “criminal enterprise … built on deceit, chicanery and the systematic flouting of US law.” Rational has struck a deal to purchase Atlantic City’s struggling Atlantic Club casino-hotel, and since New Jersey’s online gambling licenses will only be given to licensed casino operators, holding such a license would put PokerStars on a fast-track to online poker dominance in New Jersey. Caesars, which is struggling under the weight of $20b+ debt and views online gambling as a new revenue lifeline, appears willing to take whatever steps necessary to keep Stars out.
While there won’t be any mano y mano action on the Jersey shore (at least, not this week), both PokerStars and Caesars continue to jockey for position in the fledgling US online gambling market. Caesars’ online division Caesars Interactive has issued a call for Nevada poker players over 21 years of age to sign up for a “field trial’ of its Nevada-licensed World Series of Poker-branded online poker site. The page is currently only taking registrants’ pertinent information but promises that “online poker for real money is coming soon!”
Not to be outdone, PokerStars is emailing players to let them know that its PokerStars.net free-play mobile app is now accessible by US residents. The app, which follows PokerStars’ debut on Facebook in February, allows US residents to enjoy ring games, tournament play and the fast-fold Zoom poker product via their smartphone or tablet with players around the globe. The iOS- and Android-compatible app is available for download via Apple and Amazon’s app stores and via Google Play. No word on whether the AGA has filed a petition with Apple, Amazon and Google to protest, er, something.