Gray machines Buds Tavern 1-24-23 (9).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.
Operators of the machines — which can be found in bars, veterans halls and truck stops — argue they take memory, dexterity, and skill to win, and are legal.
The machines, which accept cash to play and offer cash payouts to successful players, have proliferated at restaurants, bars, veterans halls and truck stops.
Poll
Most Popular
Articles
- Investigation underway after woman dies during routine cleanup of Louisville alley
- Byrdie's at Hotel Genevieve in NuLu closes permanently after opening in Dec. 2024
- JCPS board votes in favor of central office reductions, restructuring plan
- CRAWFORD | For Louisville's Kelsey, Baylor is just the next game, even if it's bigger than that
- ‘Murder in Glitter Ball City’ | HBO documentary explores 2010 Old Louisville murder
- 6 people facing more than 100 charges for illegally killing animals in alleged poaching ring
- Louisville police looking for suspect accused of burglarizing same Family Dollar 3 times
- Infant known as ‘Baby Doe’ identified nearly 40 years after death in southern Indiana
- Louisville family sues Masonic Homes after father found dead outside rehab facility
- Louisville Kings announce bobblehead, T-shirt giveaways for inaugural season