Much like illicit massage parlors, plainly rule-breaking yet ubiquitous, game rooms have proven difficult to stamp out. Some estimate 1,000 locations in Florida, with no official tally.įor years, neighborhood casinos have gone largely ignored by local law enforcement, despite frequent police visits, mostly related to the conduct of customers. Legal names of the businesses differ from signage, and names on paperwork often turn up people who say they aren’t the real owner.Īt least 70 game rooms were operating in Tampa Bay as of early May, a review of tax and other records shows. Some bear only opaque windows and a buzzer, found by word of mouth. The “game rooms,” as they’re known in the industry, don’t advertise and often don’t appear on Google Maps. The Tampa Bay Times visited nearly 30 gambling arcades to watch this scene play out. Yet if you are in Pinellas, Hillsborough, Pasco or Manatee County, illegal slots are never far away.
With few exceptions, like the Seminole Hard Rock casino on a 9-acre reservation outside Tampa, slot machines are illegal in Tampa Bay - and the rest of the state. The manager allowed a photo on the condition that the Tampa Bay Times not disclose the game room's exact location.
A gambler plays a slot machine at an arcade in the Kenneth City area of Pinellas County.