Gray machines Buds Tavern 1-24-23 (1).JPG
- Updated
Bud's Tavern in Jeffersontown features three Burning Barrel machines that proprietor Rebecca Henry says customers love. Called "skill games" by their manufacturers and "gray games" by opponents, the machines are at the center of an expensive lobbying fight in Kentucky. Some want to regulate and tax them, while others say they are illegal gambling and should be explicitly banned. Jan. 24, 2023 (WDRB photo)
As featured on
So-called 'skill' games are popping up at bars and convenience stores all over Kentucky. Powerful interests are set to clash in Frankfort over whether the games should outlawed, regulated or left alone.
Kentucky lawmakers passed a bill to outlaw thousands of gaming machines with cash payouts that have proliferated at bars and restaurants across the state, setting up a potential legal challenge from the industry behind the games going by names like Burning Barrel and Wildcat.
Poll
Most Popular
Articles
- UofL student with ‘invisible disability’ urges stricter accessible parking enforcement
- UPDATED Tornado Watch
- Louisville residents raise concerns over 104-unit apartment plan near Breckenridge Lane
- State officials plan to permanently reduce 2nd Street Bridge to 3 lanes
- 4 arrested after Louisville police seize 3D-printed guns, THC vapes
- Teen girl killed after being hit by multiple vehicles on Cane Run Road, police say
- Louisville man avoids trial with plea agreement in fatal 2021 DUI crash
- Former JCPS teacher sentenced to 70 years for sexually abusing children
- JCPS board votes against revised reorganization of department serving students with disabilities
- CRAWFORD | Louisville heads into ACC Tournament without Mikel Brown — and without uncertainty