acezag
Flush
One of the really interesting contradictions of this hobby is that some of the most desired, rare or collectable "grail" chips often came from anonymous, run-down, shithole card rooms that barely kept it together. (And I say "shithole" fondly - my love of poker was born through countless hours in an Eastern Washington truck stop's run-down, shit-hole card room, rubbing elbows with long haul truckers, farmers and winos).
Nobody barely noticed when many of these places finally breathed their last - often we as chippers are the first real celebration of anything about them, years or decades after the doors closed.
I love discovering their hidden stories, especially after a good online dig.
Here's one: Stockton's Delta Club.
The chips (the club also had a different oversized inlay set later) (picture credit: @JWC ):
The Club: https://poker.fandom.com/wiki/Delta_Card_Room
LOOK AT THAT HOT BITCH
Player highlights / quotes:

Anybody else stumble on a good one?
Nobody barely noticed when many of these places finally breathed their last - often we as chippers are the first real celebration of anything about them, years or decades after the doors closed.
I love discovering their hidden stories, especially after a good online dig.
Here's one: Stockton's Delta Club.
The chips (the club also had a different oversized inlay set later) (picture credit: @JWC ):
The Club: https://poker.fandom.com/wiki/Delta_Card_Room
LOOK AT THAT HOT BITCH
Player highlights / quotes:
- "If it wasn't for the house players there would be no game. Since the kitchen burned down there hasn't been food service there for a while."
- [Yet....] "FREE Breakfast EVERY DAY, between 10am-Noon"
- Pay $20 to get $40 in chips (2 hour min play required), between 10am-11am everyday.
- Their nearest competitor is 60 ft away, run by a widow who's just biding her time for an offer...
Anybody else stumble on a good one?