2023 New Chip Releases (6 Viewers)

After 10 pages, one thing is becoming even more clear... the remaining/major customers of Paulson clay chips, i.e. U.S. casinos, are abandoning ship, slowly, but surely... what will the significant majority of U.S. casino chips look like in 5+ years? more plastic, more secure, fewer clays, and a lot uglier :cry:
All for the death of clay in casinos if it means they will cater to home market again.
 
All for the death of clay in casinos if it means they will cater to home market again.
David from CPC has recently posted that they aren't receiving enough orders to stay afloat for too long. I seriously doubt a second clay-chip maker would improve the situation.

Fortunately for CPC, I doubt that the Angel group (owner of GPI who owns Paulson) would maintain the labor force to produce home chips, when it would be more economically sound to simply pull the plug.
 
David from CPC has recently posted that they aren't receiving enough orders to stay afloat for too long. I seriously doubt a second clay-chip maker would improve the situation.

Fortunately for CPC, I doubt that the Angel group (owner of GPI who owns Paulson) would maintain the labor force to produce home chips, when it would be more economically sound to simply pull the plug.
Okay they pull the plug and the equipment and chip making IP what gets thrown in the dumpster and walk away?
 
Fortunately for CPC, I doubt that the Angel group (owner of GPI who owns Paulson) would maintain the labor force to produce home chips, when it would be more economically sound to simply pull the plug.
Perhaps they would sell it off. But you’d have to go to Mexico to pick up what was left.

Another route they might go is cheaper chips to manufacture.

But your probably right, just pay off their remaining contracts and lock the doors.
 
Perhaps they would sell it off. But you’d have to go to Mexico to pick up what was left.

Another route they might go is cheaper chips to manufacture.

But your probably right, just pay off their remaining contracts and lock the doors.
I thought about the idea of selling it off, but they are probably under some contract for XX-years to not release to the general public, to prevent forgeries from being made. Given that chips in play can stay in play for many years (Slo-pitch casino in Washington has been using bike-tires put in play 13 years ago), I'm inclined to think that even if they decided tomorrow to shut down operations, it would still be 10 years before anyone could make chips willy-nilly.
 

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