Gaming system and gaming machines utilizing tickets having a feature trigger

Abstract
A casino gaming system includes gaming machines which are configured to accept and read tickets. The ticket may comprise cash-value tickets or non-cash value/promotional tickets. The tickets may also include secondary feature triggering indicia. The player may present the cash-value ticket having a feature triggering indicia or a non-cash value/promotional ticket to a gaming machine, such as by inserting it into a media reader such as a bill acceptor. Associated monetary value or non-monetary credits may be credited to the machine. In addition, if the ticket includes a feature triggering indicia, when such an indicia is detected, the gaming machine preferably triggers or initiates the feature.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to casino gaming systems and gaming machines and, particularly, to such systems and machines which accept cash tickets.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the past, wagering gaming devices such as slot machines were all configured to accept coins as the basis for a player's wager and were configured to dispense coins as winning payouts or as a cash-out to the player. However, this required players and casinos to handle large amounts of coins and required the slot machines to have complex, expensive and space-occupying coin handling apparatus such as coin acceptors, coin storage and coin dispending apparatus. To address these problems, coin-less and/or entirely cashless gaming systems and gaming machines were developed. In coin-less gaming systems, gaming machines may be configured to accept paper currency as well as accept and dispense paper or similar tickets. In cashless systems, the gaming machines may only be configured to accept and dispense cash tickets.


The tickets used in these “ticket” based gaming systems and gaming machines have associated monetary or cash value and may thus be referred to as cash tickets. Each ticket may have a bar code or other information which identifies the ticket and/or its value, such as for use in validating the ticket when it is later presented by the patron. Such a ticketing system and associated tickets are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,048,269 to Burns which is incorporated into this application by reference in its entirety.


Relative to these newer “ticket” based systems, a patron can access on-property kiosk and ATM devices to access money from their bank in the form of ATM, check, credit and debit transactions. The patron may obtain this money out of a cash machine such as an EVERI® ATM product or any number of other EVERI® devices for use in casinos such as EVERI's CasinoCashPlus product or an EVERI kiosk. Once the patron's monetary transaction has been approved by the bank or other financial institution, the patron may receive their withdrawal in the form of cash or ticket. When the patron chooses to select the ticket option, a cash ticket is generated. Alternatively, the player may withdraw funds with the aid of a casino cage cashier or provide monetary funds to that cashier and exchange the withdrawn or provided funds for a cash ticket.


The patron may present their cash ticket at a gaming machine or other device that accepts such cash tickets within the casino that issued the ticket or at related casinos in the case of a multi-casino operation. The cash ticket is validated by the particular casino then redeemed and the patron receives his or her cash in the form of credits automatically configured onto the gaming machine or gaming device.


Such traditional ticket validation in a particular casino requires the use of a computer network within the casino along with system components that are approved by the gaming regulatory agencies within which each casino or casino enterprise operates. New features rolled out to this form of a gaming system within the casino requires extensive coordination between vendors along with time consuming jurisdictional approvals and training of casino staff and patrons. Because there is a need to rapidly develop and deploy new patron-desirable features within a casino, it is preferable to have a system where core modifications to existing casino systems are not required.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

One aspect of the invention is a casino ticket system for providing or triggering game and credit related features to a gaming machine by using a ticket with special indicia printed on the ticket to trigger special features when the ticket is read at the gaming machine. The disclosed system minimizes the complexity of installing new game features into gaming machines within a casino.


In another aspect, the invention comprises the issuance of a ticket by a system-adapted kiosk. The ticket may comprise a feature triggering ticket, e.g. one that includes feature triggering indicia, and may or may not have associated monetary value. The ticket may be issued as a result of a transaction at the kiosk, such as a player's redemption of a monetary value ticket, associating of cash with the kiosk or access to funds, such as from a player's bank or other financial account. The award of the feature triggering indicia may be random or based upon various criteria, such as the size of a requested monetary transaction at the kiosk.


In one embodiment of the invention, feature triggers comprise indicia that are either printed on a ticket prior to being installed in a system kiosk or printed in real-time (i.e. at the time the ticket is generated at the system kiosk). For example, in one embodiment a feature triggering indicia may comprise the particular company logo that has been preprinted on each ticket installed in a system kiosk. The company logo is placed in a very specific location on the cash ticket.


When a patron receives a ticket from the kiosk with the feature triggering indicia and presents it to a gaming machine, a reader of the gaming machine scans for the indicia. If the reader finds a feature triggering indicia, such is communicated to the gaming machine. The triggered feature may vary. Some examples include, but are not limited to: placing specific credits on the game, opening or initiating a special game feature, initiating or enabling one or more bonus games, providing bonus or additional awards, providing the player with a special pay table (such as for a predefined number of plays on the game), provide free play or subsidized play, providing a player with objects or features which either increase the probability of the player achieving a game win or a higher game payout, enabling the player to reach a higher level of a game or a game bonus event, or other features.


In one embodiment, the feature triggering indicia or associated indicators are communicated from the gaming machine to a remote device or system, such as a promotional system for verification and/or to implement the one or more features, such as by causing the activation of features at specific times, random times, time intervals, or other times. When the current time is outside of the times mentioned above, the feature would not be activated by the gaming machine.


In still another aspect of the invention, the feature triggering indicia may provide the patron with additional credits for game play. The credits may also be time activated whereupon additional credits are applied to the gaming machine for example after the player has played the game for greater than a defined time interval, at a specific time of day, on a specific day, has traversed multiple games on the gaming machine, or any other game play scenario that can be tracked and detected by the gaming device.


In embodiments of the invention two or more feature triggering indicia may be printed on the casino ticket. In other embodiments, not all tickets may include a feature triggering indicia at all. Some examples of ticket indicia used as feature triggers include: company logos, specific gaming machine manufactures logo or specific gaming machine manufacturer game logos.


In one embodiment of the invention the feature triggering indicia may include a code requiring validation at the gaming machine before any features are enabled at the gaming machine. For example, a specific feature triggering indicia may include a code printed as part of said indicia. The code may be in the form of a barcode such as a QR code. The code is printed along with the indicia at the time of ticket issuance either from a kiosk or another gaming machine. When the ticket is read by a gaming machine, the indicia is first identified as valid then the barcode is decoded and the information pass on to the gaming machine or a remote server or other device for validation. The barcode may include a plurality of encoded information such as serial number and data/time. The gaming machine validates the feature triggering indicia's barcode such as by ensuring the encoded time within the feature triggering indicia is a value within an allowable time interval. Once the feature triggering indicia printed on the ticket has been validated, the feature is enabled on the gaming machine.


In still other aspects of the invention, gaming machines are configured to have the capability to print tickets of the invention or configured to dispense tickets of the invention having pre-printed feature triggering indicia on them. For example: a WMS Monopoly® gaming machine may be loaded with blank value tickets which are pre-printed with Monopoly® logo on them. After such a ticket is issued, if it is later presented to another Monopoly® gaming machine, the reader scans for this logo and communicates with the gaming device that the logo is present which in turn triggers the feature on the gaming machine. This essentially enables gaming machines that have been branded by a specific manufacture to provide special features for patrons to entice them to reinsert a cash ticket into another gaming machine of the same type or belonging to the same manufacturer.


In other aspects of the invention, feature trigger technology may be combined. This includes triggering special features at a gaming machine if the presented ticket was printed from a specific manufacturer's system kiosk and in addition if a specific manufacturer's logo or game brand logo indicia were also printed on the ticket and that particular brand of game accepted the ticket. In such event, the gaming machine might provides both the system kiosk feature trigger in addition to the game brand feature (i.e. the system kiosk feature trigger may initiate 1 free credit on any game whereas if the same ticket has a Monopoly® logo it may also trigger a special game feature or bonus when the ticket is inserted into a Monopoly® gaming machine).


In one embodiment of the invention, one or more feature triggering indicia may be associated with a ticket, such as which is generated in association with a transaction performed at a kiosk, issued at cash-out from a gaming machine or the like. The ticket may comprise a cash ticket or might comprise a separate ticket, such as a non-cash value or promotional ticket. The financial transaction might comprise, for example, a player inserting currency or coins into the kiosk in order to obtain a cash ticket which can be used to associate funds with a gaming machine for play of one or more wagering games. The financial transaction might alternatively comprise a debit, credit or other transaction, such as an ATM type transaction in which a player seeks funds from a financial account.


In one embodiment, one or more feature triggering indicia are associated with a cash or monetary value ticket (which when presented to a gaming machine causes monetary value or credits to be associated with the machine) or an additional non-cash value or promotional ticket. The feature triggering indicia may comprise an award or promotion, such as for engaging in a transaction (such as a financial transaction at a kiosk).


In one embodiment, a method of operating a gaming machine comprises reading at least one ticket using a reading device; determining if the ticket includes at least one feature triggering indicia accepting a wager to initiate a wagering game through a player interface device; determining a game outcome from one or more possible game outcomes; providing an award based upon the game outcome; and in the event that the ticket includes the at least one feature triggering indicia and the game outcome triggers a game feature corresponding to the at least one feature triggering indicia, providing a bonus award. In one embodiment, the triggering game feature may be a bonus round or bonus event of the game being presented at the gaming machine. The bonus award might comprise additional credits or the like which are awarded to the player apart from those awarded to the player as part of the normal game play.


In yet another embodiment, a method of presenting a feature at a wagering game based upon a feature triggering indicia associated with a ticket comprises the steps of: receiving input from a player to a kiosk of a monetary value ticket; processing the monetary value ticket for redemption; generating at least one feature ticket at the kiosk, the feature ticket having at least one feature triggering indicia; issuing the at least one feature ticket from said kiosk; reading the at least one feature ticket at a reader associated with a gaming device at which one or more wagering games are presented; and implementing at least one game feature at the wagering game presented at the gaming device in response to the presence of the at least one feature triggering indicia.


In one embodiment of the invention, tickets comprise printed media, such as printed receipts. However, the tickets might comprise other media having data associated therewith (cards, etc.) and/or be virtual or electronic, such as where the ticket is represented by an image or where the feature triggering indicia is associated with a player's player tracking account or the like and electronically provided to a gaming machine which is played by the player.


Further objects, features, and advantages of the present invention over the prior art will become apparent from the detailed description of the drawings which follows, when considered with the attached figures.





DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is illustrates one embodiment of a system of the present invention;



FIG. 2 illustrates a gaming machine of the system illustrated in FIG. 1;



FIG. 3 illustrates a cash and ticket kiosk of the system illustrated in FIG. 1;



FIG. 4 illustrates the dispensing of a ticket from a kiosk and then the presentation of that cash ticket at a gaming machine;



FIG. 5 illustrates one example of a ticket having a feature triggering indicia in accordance with the present invention;



FIG. 6 illustrates an example of a virtual credit ticket having a feature triggering symbol in accordance with the present invention;



FIG. 7 illustrates another embodiment of a system of the present invention;



FIGS. 8 and 9 illustrate other embodiments of tickets bearing feature triggering indicia in accordance with the invention;



FIG. 10 illustrates another embodiment of the invention where a monetary value ticket issued by a gaming machine is presented at a kiosk for redemption and a ticket having a feature trigger is dispensed for presentation to a gaming machine; and



FIGS. 11A and 11B illustrate a gaming machine which is configured to present a game having a triggered feature.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough description of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art, that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known features have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the invention.


One embodiment of the invention is a casino ticket system for providing game and credit related features to a gaming machine by using a ticket with special indicia printed on the ticket to trigger the special features when the ticket is read at the gaming machine, such as when inserted in a casino gaming machine's bill or ticket acceptor.


The disclosure, including the figures, describes the system, method and their components with reference to illustrative examples. For example, the disclosed system is shown as an addition to an existing casino system. However, it should be noted that the disclosed system may also be implemented as a standalone system completely separate from the existing casino systems. The present disclosure proceeds with respect to the system for illustrative purposes only. Other examples and embodiments are contemplated and are mentioned below or are otherwise imaginable to someone skilled in the art. The scope of the invention is not limited to the few examples and described embodiments of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by reference to the appended claims. Changes can be made to the examples, including alternative designs not disclosed, and still be within the scope of the claims.


The present disclosure provides both a system and method for providing gaming machine functionality triggered by the insertion of a ticket along with the detection of one or more indicia printed thereon. Additionally, system kiosks are adapted to issue casino tickets with indicia on the tickets to patrons and gaming machines are configured to read the tickets, such as using gaming machine bill acceptors adapted to detect the indicia and send feature triggers to the gaming machine. The gaming machines are adapted to receive the feature triggers and use them to provide special features to patrons playing them.


One embodiment of a system of the invention will now be described with reference to FIG. 1. In one embodiment, the system 1000 is a casino system which is configured to present wager-based games to players, such as via one or more gaming machines. Preferably, those machines are configured to accept cash tickets or similar media and, at one or more times, implement various functionality or features in response thereto. As described below, however, the system may include various other devices and features, including related systems and devices.


As illustrated, in one embodiment a system 1000 includes one or more kiosks 1070 which are preferably capable of dispensing tickets, including cash and promotional tickets, one or more gaming machines 1080 which are configured to accept cash or other tickets, as well as other gaming system related features such as one or more casino servers 1040 (which servers may comprise game servers which are configured to present server based games via the gaming machines 1080 or other devices), a network 1050 which links various components of the system 1000, one or more operator interfaces 1010 for interacting with the system 1000 and/or the components thereof, 1030, one or more casino systems 1020 (such as implemented by one or more servers and/or other computing device or equipment) such as casino accounting, casino player tracking or other features, and various other devices, such as for presenting mobile or remote gaming and the like, including computing devices 1100 such as desktop and laptop computers, tablets or the like (which may be configured as 1100, one or more mobile devices 1090 such as cell phones, PDA's or the like, and in-room gaming devices 1060, such as television set-top gaming devices.


In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the system is configured to operate within a physical casino. However, the system can assume a variety of forms including physical route locations similar to Nevada gaming routes, video lottery configurations operated by a governmental entity, or other physical locations where operation of a gaming machine 1080 is legal, and preferably where a system kiosk 1070, a network 1050, and one or more servers 1040 may be present or utilized.



FIG. 2 illustrates one embodiment of a gaming machine 2000 which is configured to present one or more wager-based games and which may be utilized in the system 1000 which is illustrated in FIG. 1. As illustrated, the gaming machine 2000 generally comprises a housing or cabinet 2010 for supporting and/or enclosing various components required for operation of the gaming machine. In the embodiment illustrated, the housing 2010 includes a door located at a front thereof, the door capable of being moved between an open position which allows access to the interior, and a closed position in which access to the interior is generally prevented. The configuration of the gaming machine 2000 may vary. In the embodiment illustrated, the gaming machine 2000 has an “upright” configuration. However, the gaming machine 2000 could have other configurations, shapes or dimensions (such as being of a “slant”-type or other configuration as is well known to those of skill in the art).


The gaming machine 2000 preferably includes at least one display device 2020 configured to display game information. The display device 2020 may be a mechanical, electro-mechanical or electronic display, such as one or more rotating reels, a video display or the like. When the display device 2020 is an electronic video display, it may comprise a cathode ray tube (CRT), high resolution flat panel liquid crystal display (LCD), projection LCD, plasma display, field emission display, digital micro-mirror display (DMD), digital light processing display (DLP), LCD touch screen, a light emitting display (LED) or other suitable displays now known or later developed, in a variety of resolutions, sizes and formats (e.g. 4:3, widescreen or the like). The display 2020 may be capable of projecting or displaying a wide variety of information, including images, symbols and other indicia or information associated with game play, game promotion or other events.


In another embodiment, the gaming machine 2000 may include one or more physical reels capable of displaying symbols. In such a configuration, means are provided for rotating the physical reels. In one or more embodiments, the means may comprise a mechanical linkage associated with a spin arm, with movement of the spin arm (a “pull”) by a user causing the reels to spin. In such an arrangement, the reels are generally allowed to free-wheel and then stop. In another embodiment, electronically controlled mechanisms are arranged to rotate and stop each reel. Such mechanisms are well known to those of skill in the art. In this arrangement, actuation of the spin arm or depression a spin button causes a controller (not shown) to signal the activation of the spin mechanism associated with one or more of the reels. Preferably, the controller is arranged to either turn off the signal to the device(s) effecting the rotation of each or all of the reels or generates a signal for activating a braking device, whereby the reels are stopped. As is well known, the combinations of reel positions and their odds of hitting are associated with the controller, and the controller is arranged to stop the reels in a position displaying a combination of indicia as determined by the controller based on the combinations and odds. The principal of such an arrangement is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,448,419 to Telnaes, which is incorporated herein by reference.


The gaming machine 2000 is preferably configured to present one or more games upon a player making a monetary payment or wager. In this regard, as described in more detail below, the gaming machine 2000 includes means for accepting monetary value.


In one embodiment, certain game outcomes may be designated as winning outcomes. Prizes or awards may be provided for winning outcomes, such as monetary payments (or representations thereof, such as prize of credits), or promotional awards as detailed herein. The gaming machine 2000 thus preferably includes means for returning unused monetary funds and/or dispensing winnings to a player.


The gaming machine 2000 preferably includes one or more player input devices (such as input buttons, plunger mechanisms, a touch-screen display, joystick, touch-pad or the like). These one or more devices may be utilized by the player to facilitate game play, such as by providing input or instruction to the gaming machine 2000. For example, such input devices may be utilized by a player to place a wager, cause the gaming machine 2000 to initiate a game (such as spin slot reels), to indicate cards to be held or discarded in a game of video draw poker, to “cash out” of the gaming machine, or to provide various other inputs.


In one preferred embodiment, the gaming machine 2000 includes at least one microprocessor or controller for controlling the gaming machine, including receiving player input and sending output signals for controlling the various components of the machine 2000 (such as generating game information for display by the display 2020). The controller may be arranged to receive information regarding funds provided by a player to the gaming machine, receive input such as a purchase/bet signal when a purchase/bet button is depressed, and receive other inputs from a player. The controller may be arranged to generate information regarding a game, such as generating game information for display by the at least one display 2020 (such as information representing images of displayed cards, slot symbols or the like), for determining winning or losing game outcomes and for displaying information regarding awards for winning game outcomes, among other things.


The controller may be configured to execute machine readable code or “software” or otherwise process information, such as obtained from a remote server. Software or other instructions may be stored on a memory or data storage device or fixed in other tangible media. This software may be configured to implement one or more games, such as in the form of one or more steps, including one or more triggered features. The memory may also store other information, such as pay table information, slot reel symbol images or the like. The gaming machine 2000 may also include one or more random number generators for generating random numbers, such as for use in selecting slot reel symbols or reel stopping positions or the like for presenting the game in a random or pseudo-random fashion.


As indicated above, the gaming machine 2000 may be configured to generate and present any variety of one or more games (including but not limited to video poker games, video or physical reel slot games, baccarat games, blackjack games, and other games now known or later developed). The gaming machine 200 may generate and present the one or more games in a standalone manner or it may be in communication with one or more external devices at one or more times. For example, the gaming machine 2000 may be configured as a server based device and obtain game code or game outcome information from a remote game server (in which event the gaming machine controller may receive game information from the server, such as game outcome information, and use that server-generated information to present the game at the gaming machine). In such a configuration, the game server may be similar to the gaming machine, such as by including at least one processor and a memory device and running software for generating game results or other game information. In one embodiment, the gaming machines 2000 may be game kiosks or interfaces which are configured to present or display the outcomes of games which are generated by the game server.


As indicated, the gaming machine 2000 is configured to present one or more wagering games. Thus, the gaming machines 2000 are preferably configured to accept value. In a preferred embodiment, the gaming machine 2000 includes a media acceptor 2030. Preferably, the media acceptor 2030 is configured to accept and read/verify paper currency and/or other media such as a cash ticket. For example, such an acceptor 2030 may be configured to feed currency or cash which is presented to the gaming machine 2000 into an optical reader. That reader may read various information on the currency or ticket, such as special feature-triggering indicia as described below. Of course, in such event the gaming machine 2000 may further be configured with one or more paper currency or ticket storage devices, such as cash boxes, and other paper currency or media handling devices (including transport devices).


The gaming machine 2000 might also be configured to read FOBs, magnetic stripe cards or other media having data associated therewith and via which value or funds may be associated with the gaming machine 2000 or accept electronic monetary value transfers. The gaming machine 2000 might also include other readers, such as RFID or image readers, such as for reading or scanning electronic tickets represented by images, bar codes, RFID tags or other data.


In one embodiment, the player associates monetary value with the gaming machine 2000, such as via a ticket, cash, coins, electronic transfer or the like, thus creating a credit or monetary balance. The player may place one or more wagers from this credit or monetary balance (e.g. the balance is reduced by the amount of the wager(s)).


In one embodiment, the games may have winning or losing outcomes. Losing outcomes may result in a loss of the player's wager. The gaming machine 2000 is preferably configured to award winnings for one or more winning wagering game outcomes (preferably those outcomes comprise a designated sub-set of all possible outcomes, wherein outcomes which are not winning are losing). Such winnings may be represented as credits, points or the like which may, for example, increase the player's credit or monetary balance. In one embodiment, the player may “cash out” and thus remove previously associated funds and any awarded winnings or such may otherwise be paid to the player. For example, upon an award or at cash-out, associated funds may be paid to the player by the gaming machine 2000, such as by issuing a printed ticket from a ticket printer 2040, which ticket represents the value which was paid or cashed out of the machine. The player might also cash-out by being dispensed coins or currency or by the transfer of monetary value or the like to player's casino account, bank account or the like.


It will be appreciated that the gaming machine illustrated is only exemplary of one embodiment of a gaming machine. For example, it is possible to for the gaming machine to have various other configurations, including different shapes and styles and having different components than as just described. For example, while the gaming machine or device may be standalone, it may be server-based, server-assisted, linked to other gaming devices, connected to a server, progressive controller (wide-area or local-area), or be handheld and/or wireless. In particular in the case of online wagering, the gaming device may be a computer, mobile phone, or microprocessor-driven device which is programmed to accept wagers, e.g. via downloadable software. The gaming machine or device 2000 may include other features. For example, the gaming machine 2000 may include other displays, light, speakers for generating sounds. The gaming machine 2000 may also include a player tracking card reader 2050 or other devices and interfaces to various systems.


As indicated, the system 1000 preferably also includes at least one kiosk. One embodiment of such a kiosk 3000 is illustrated in FIG. 3. Preferably, the kiosk 3000 is configured to generate cash tickets or, as described below, promotional or non-cash tickets, such as virtual credit tickets, which tickets can be presented to a gaming machine of the system. In a most preferred embodiment, at one or more times those tickets have associated indicia which may be read and utilized by one of the gaming machines 2000 to trigger game features (such as when such a ticket bearing indicia is inserted in a gaming machine media reader 2030 and one or more the indicia are detected).


The kiosk 3000 may comprise an ATM type device or other devices. For example, in one embodiment, the kiosk 3000 is configured to associate a player's funds with a cash ticket, which cash ticket can be utilized by the player at one or more gaming machines to fund wagering activity. For example, the kiosk 3000 might include a bill validator and/or coin acceptor for accepting bills and/or coins from a player. The kiosk 3000 may associate those funds with a cash ticket which is dispensed to the player, which cash ticket may be presented by the player to a gaming machine as described below.


In other embodiments, the kiosk 3000 may be configured to read credit cards, ATM cards or other cards or otherwise facilitate various types of monetary transactions (whether cash, credit, via a player's existing bank account, a new credit line, etc. including via electronic funds transfer or the like) and associate funds with a cash ticket. For example, a player might present a bank card at the kiosk 3000. The kiosk 3000 may communicate with an ATM network for processing a credit or debit transaction. Funds accessed by the player may be associated with one or more cash tickets which are dispensed to the player.


The kiosk 3000 may also be configured to read tickets or other media, such as cash-value or cash-out tickets which are dispensed from a gaming machine. The kiosk 3000 may also be configured to dispense monetary value, such as in the form of a ticket, paper currency, coins or other media (including by writing to a credit card, debit card or the like). For example, the kiosk 3000 may be configured like an ATM device where it is capable of dispensing cash/currency, such as via a requested withdrawal transaction from a bank account.


The kiosk 3000 of the preferred embodiment may include a cabinet 3070 which houses or support a ticket printer 3060, a bill acceptor 3050, at least one media reader 3040 (such as configured to read printed tickets, magnetic stripe or chip cards, etc.), and a display 3020 with optional display 3010. Of course, the kiosk 3000 may have various configurations, including various shapes and sizes and features. The kiosk 3000 preferably includes at least one controller, such as for controlling the various peripherals devices thereof (which controller may comprise, for example, a processor which controls the peripherals of the kiosk and is configured to implement the functionality herein, such as by executing machine readable code, such as stored in an associated memory or other medium). The kiosk 3000 may be in communication with one or more external devices or systems, such a casino server 1040, such as via a communication interface.



FIG. 5 illustrates one embodiment of a casino cash ticket 5000 in accordance with the invention. In one embodiment, the casino cash ticket 5000 includes bar code 5020 or similar information which may be used to identify the ticket and/or its associated value. Such information may comprise a two or three-dimensional code or other printed or displayed information. In addition, the cash ticket 5000 may include information which represents the ticket type 5010.


In a preferred embodiment, the cash ticket 5000 may also include one or more feature trigger indicia 5030. The feature triggering indicia 5030 may have various forms and comprise various elements. For example, the feature triggering indicia 5030 may comprise: company logos, promotion information, player information, casino information, casino logos, game logos, game types, game manufacturer logo, or any information that may take the form of indicia printed on ticket 5000 such as numbers, letters, symbols, images, icons, logos, codes or combinations and variations thereof.


In one embodiment, a cash ticket 5000 may include more than one feature triggering indicia. Thus, the cash ticket 5000 may include a second feature triggering indicia 5040. The second or other feature triggering indicia may be of the same type or a different type as the first one. Further any number of indicia in any type may be present on a single cash ticket 5000 and may be strategically located where they can be scanned/read or detected. The feature triggering indicia may be pre-printed on cash tickets issued by system kiosk 3000 or system kiosk 3000 may print the indicia in real-time as the ticket is issued.


In one embodiment of the invention, the disclosed system 1000 uses cash tickets to trigger features, such as game features, at a gaming machine 2000. In particular, as illustrated in FIG. 4, a cash ticket 4010 may be issued from a system kiosk 4000 (though the cash ticket 4010 could be issued in other manners, such as from a gaming machine 2000 at cash-out or for other reasons). As indicated above, the cash ticket 4010 may include one or more feature triggering indicia.


As illustrated, a player may present the cash ticket 5000 to a gaming machine 2000, such as by inserting it into the media reader 2030. When the reader detects the presence of a feature triggering indicia, that information is preferably utilized to initiate a feature. In one embodiment, information regarding the feature triggering indicia may be transmitted to the gaming machine's processor or controller which utilizes that information to trigger a feature (for example, gaming machine may store a look-up table of features which correspond to particular feature triggering indicia). In other embodiments, it is possible for information regarding the feature triggering indicia to be forward to a remote game server which, in turn, causes the gaming machine to initiate the feature.


In a preferred embodiment, the cash ticket 4010 is issued with the cash amount printed or encoded thereon (or with information which can be used to verify or determine the value of the ticket printed thereon). As indicated herein, the cash ticket 4010 might be issued from a kiosk 4000 (such as a result of a monetary transaction processed at the kiosk, such as the input or transfer of funds to the kiosk), from a gaming machine 2000 (such as in response to a request from a player to cash out funds associated with the machine or for other reasons), or from other devices. In addition, the cash ticket 4010 may include one or more feature triggering indicia, such as printed on the ticket in predefined regions thereof. The cash ticket 4010 is first issued to the patron and then the patron takes the cash ticket 4010 to a gaming machine 2000 or any other device that accepts cash tickets and inserts the cash ticket 4010 into the media reader 2030, such as the bill acceptor/ticket reading device. When the cash ticket 4010 is inserted into gaming machine 2000, the media reader 2030 reads the cash ticket 4010, scans the cash ticket 4010 for one or more feature trigger indicia (such as located in strategically positioned locations on the cash ticket 4010), and then validates the cash ticket 4010. Upon successful validation of cash ticket 4010 by gaming machine 2000, the feature trigger information is communicated from the media reader 2030, causing the feature to be initiated at the gaming machine.


Feature trigger functionality which is initiated at the gaming machine 2000 in response to the presence of a feature triggering indicia on a presented cash ticket may include (but is not limited to) one or more of: adding monetary credits or increasing a monetary credit balance, adding non-monetary credits or increasing a non-monetary credit balance, one or more bonus features, award multipliers, special pay tables (such as having one or more different payouts or different winning and/or losing outcomes), special game screens, special information to be presented to the player on the game display, special game symbols, special games or other opportunities to wager and win additional credits, or any similar functionality where new features are enabled by the detection of the indicia.


Feature trigger functionality may only be enabled or triggered based upon secondary criteria, such as a particular time of day, a predetermined amount of time after the ticket is issued, time of month, holiday, sequence of days (such as weekend or promotional dates), or the feature might be enabled randomly. For example there may be 3 features provided by a specific wagering game when a feature trigger indicia is detected. One of the three features may be selected randomly by the gaming machine's software or the three features may be presented as options to the player wherein the player is asked to choose which one of the three features. The presentation of feature options to the player may be on any of the displays available on the gaming machine. (i.e. secondary, tertiary, or other game display) or may be provided in a pop-up window on the main gaming machine display. As described herein, in one embodiment the feature trigger might provide for additional or promotional credits which can be used at a gaming machine. These credits might be useable just like normal monetary value credits, or might only be usable for certain games (including versions of monetary wagering games having different pay tables or features), or only be usable at certain times. For example, in one embodiment promotional credits might only be used at the gaming machine where the feature is triggered and might not be capable of being “cashed-out” from the machine or moved or played at other machines.


In other embodiments, triggered features may be combined. For example, special features may be triggered if a cash ticket was printed from a specific manufacturer's kiosk or if a game manufacturer logo or game brand logo was also printed on the ticket. When that particular manufacturer's gaming machine accepts the ticket, the gaming machine provides the trigger feature information to the gaming machine's game processor or controller.


In another embodiment of the invention, features of the invention may be applied to tickets other than cash or monetary value tickets. For example, aspects of the invention include promotional tickets and tickets representing non-cash values, bonuses and promotions. One embodiment of a non-cash ticket 5000 is illustrated in FIG. 6. As illustrated, the ticket 5000 may again include information regarding the ticket type 6100, which information may indicate that the ticket is not a cash ticket but is instead a type which provides other than cash credits or game play credits. As one example, ticket type 6100 may provide virtual credits. Virtual credits preferably have no monetary value, but instead may comprise credits for virtual objects used by a particular game type or group of games played on gaming machines by patrons. Virtual game credits may include credits or points needed to achieve a specific game level, needed to obtain a specific game component, or may include credits or virtual objects that can be used within gaming machine virtual environments defined by a game.


Such a promotional or non-cash ticket 6000 may also include one or more feature triggering indicia. FIG. 6 illustrates some examples of additional feature triggering indicia. Such feature triggering indicia might, of course, be used with a cash ticket such as that described above. For example, in one embodiment, indicia may be printed on a ticket 5000 which triggers special bonuses. For example FIG. 6 illustrates a ticket 6000 having a first feature triggering indicia 6500 and a second feature triggering indicia 6400. When either of these indicia is detected on a presented ticket, the patron may receive a special bonus for the day such as double credits, extra credits or promotional credits. Other indicia such as indicia 6300, indicia 6400, indicia 6500, indicia 6600, and indicia 6700 may trigger other features within the game when they are detected by the bill acceptor and communicated to the gaming machine processor.


As described herein, in one embodiment a cash ticket may be generated, such as in response to a player providing funds to a kiosk. As indicated, such a cash ticket may include one or more feature triggering indicia. As also described, however, one or more non-cash tickets may be generated and issued to the player. As one example, a player might associate funds with a kiosk (by providing cash or coins or engaging in a financial transaction at the kiosk). In response, the kiosk might issue a first cash ticket and a second promotional ticket. The promotional ticket might comprise, for example, a ticket with only one or more feature initiating indicia associated therewith.


As indicated below, various criteria may be used in determining whether to issue feature triggering indicia (associated with a cash ticket or as part of a secondary ticket). For example, a kiosk of the invention might be operated by a financial transaction processor. In order to entice a player to use the kiosk to process a financial transaction (such as by using their credit or debit card at the kiosk or opening a new line of credit or the like, which transactions may involve a fee), the processor might issue one or more promotional tickets to the player, which promotional tickets have associated feature triggering indicia, such as indicia which includes one or more promotional credits which may be used at one or more gaming machines for play of games, such as free play of one or more games.


As one example, a player might use a debit or credit card at a kiosk in order to access funds. The funds might be directly dispensed to the player (such as in the form of cash or currency dispensed to the player). The accessed funds might instead be associated with a cash ticket which is dispensed to the player and which can be presented by the player at a gaming machine in order to fund game play at the machine. In addition (to the dispensed cash or monetary-value ticket), the player may be issued a separate ticket, such as a non-cash feature ticket. This promotional type of ticket may have one or more feature triggering indicia associated therewith, such as a feature trigger which provides additional credits for play at a gaming machine. In one embodiment, various criteria may be applied in determining whether to issue the secondary ticket and/or the awards associated with the ticket. As one example, different numbers of promotional credits, different types of game bonuses, game features or the like might be awarded depending upon the size of the financial transaction requested by the player (e.g. 5 free credits for a requested financial transaction between $20-100, 15 for a transaction between $101 and $250, etc.).


As yet another example of the invention, as illustrated in FIG. 10, a player might be in possession of a monetary value ticket MT (or other media). Such a ticket might have been dispensed to the player from a gaming machine 2000. As one example, a player might have funds associated with a gaming machine 2000 (such funds might have been provided to the gaming machine by the player and/or awarded as winnings). The player might desire to cash out those funds from the gaming machine 2000. In response, the gaming machine 2000 might be configured to generate a cash-out ticket MT having associated monetary value (e.g. representing the balance of the funds that were associated with the gaming machine).


In one embodiment, the player might present such a monetary value ticket MT to a kiosk 3000 for redemption. The player might insert the ticket MT into a media reader of the kiosk 3000. The kiosk 3000 may read information which is associated with the ticket, such as by reading a bar code printed thereon. The kiosk 3000 may then validate the ticket, such as to confirm its authenticity and/or value, such as by sending ticket information to a remote validation server or the like, in a process which is well known in the art. If the ticket MT (or other media) is valid, the kiosk 3000 may be configured to dispense money M (such as currency and/or coins) to the player in the amount of the value of the ticket MT (or the kiosk 3000 might validate the ticket and cause monetary value to be transferred to a player's casino account, bank account or the like, or to provide a receipt which allows the player to collect their money from a casino cage, cashier or the like). In addition, as disclosed herein, the kiosk 3000 may be configured to generate and issue a feature triggering ticket FT, such as described herein. The player might then provide the feature-triggering ticket FT to a gaming machine 2000 in order to trigger one or more features, as described herein.


In another embodiment, a cash-out ticket which is dispensed by a gaming machine might have one or more feature triggering indicia directed associated therewith as indicated herein or a separate promotional ticket having one or more feature triggering indicia might be issued with or generally proximate in time (before or after) the cash-out ticket. Once again, the feature triggering indicia might comprise one or more free credits/games or the like. For example, in the situation where the player is issued a cash-out ticket and a separate promotional ticket, the player might redeem the cash-out ticket at a kiosk or cashier's station (such as in the manner described above, but where the kiosk may or may not also issue another feature triggering ticket given that the gaming machine already issued one at cash-out). The player might take the promotional ticket to another (or the same) gaming machine so trigger the feature, such as to be credited the game credits/free game(s) or the like. Once again, the value of the feature trigger might vary. As one example, the number of free games or free credits might depend upon the value of the funds the player is cashing out or has wagered or lost. For example, a player might provide $X to the gaming machine for play. If the player cashes out more than 75% of those funds, then the player might receive a first number of credits or free games, if the player cashes out between 50-75% of those funds the player might receive a second, higher number of credits or free games, and if the player cashes out less than 50% of those funds the player might receive an even higher third number of credits or free games via the one or more feature trigging indicia. As indicated herein, other criteria might be used to determine when to issue one or more feature triggering indicia or the value of the feature.


In general, a variety of criteria may be used to determine whether to issue a ticket which includes a feature-triggering indicia (whether such a ticket also has monetary value or is only a feature triggering ticket) and/or to determine the particular triggered feature. As indicated, such criteria might comprise the value of a player's cash-out from a gaming machine, the amount of funds associated with a kiosk, the value of a financial transaction processed via the kiosk (such as based upon an amount of currency to be dispensed based upon a currency withdrawal), the value of a ticket being redeemed or other transaction value (at a kiosk or gaming machine), qualification of the player, such as based upon game play which is tracked via a casino player tracking system as described below, or other criteria. In one embodiment, the determination of a whether to issue a feature triggering ticket or include a feature triggering indicia, or the particular triggered feature, might be determined or selected randomly (or via one or more weighted tables, look-up tables or the like).


In one embodiment, a player's activities may be tracked, such as via a player tracking system. Such systems are well known in the art and may use a player card or other player identifier to identify a player. Activities of a player, such as play at one or more gaming machines, may be tracked and associated with the player via the player's identification of themselves at the machines.


In one embodiment, the determination whether to issue a feature triggering ticket or include such a feature on a ticket (such as on a cash-out ticket) might be determined with reference to the player's identity and/or the player tracking system. For example, referring to FIG. 1, a player might identify themselves at a kiosk 1070 via their player tracking card and then insert a ticket for redemption. The kiosk 1070 might validate the ticket, such as via communication with a casino accounting system 1020 which implements accounting/ticketing functions, and might send information regarding the redemption request to a casino promotional system 1020 which is configured to implement the features of the invention. The casino promotional system 1020 might use the player identity information to determine a player's game activity, such as by interrogating a casino player tracking system 1020 which tracks and stores such information. The casino player tracking system 1020 might confirm, for example, that the player has wagered over $1000 in the last 24 hours at gaming machines at the casino, thus entitling the player to the award of a feature trigger. The casino promotional system 1020 may thus cause the kiosk 1070 to print a promotional ticket or a cash-value ticket having at least one feature-triggering indicia.


In one embodiment, a player might be presented with an offer for a feature trigger. For example, a player might seek redemption of a monetary value ticket at a kiosk. Upon reading the ticket, the kiosk might be configured to present an offer to the player. As one example, the offer might be for the player to play a certain amount of funds at a particular gaming machine. If the player accepts, the funds associated with the ticket which is being redeemed by the player might be transferred to a new ticket which includes a feature trigger and that ticket may be dispensed to the player. The remaining funds belonging to the player (if any) might then be dispensed to the player. In this configuration, the particular feature, including the value of the feature, etc., might be determined or selected in conjunction with the value of the offer. Further, a player might be offered more than one offer. For example, a player might seek to redeem a monetary value ticket having a value of $200. The player might be offered a feature trigger which offers 4× bonus pay if the player elects to play or associate the entire $200 with the feature ticket, or 2× bonus pay if they elect to play $50.


In other embodiments of the invention, combinations of two or more feature triggering indicia may result in one or more special game features such as game play, game pay table, game bonuses, extra credit, promotional credits, virtual game pieces, virtual game objects that can be used to enhance a game, anything of value that can be used by the game, anything of use for within a game, and any unique promotion or award. For example, in one embodiment when the player plays a game where virtual game pieces are part of the game and a player presents a ticket in accordance with the invention which includes a feature triggering indicia 6400, the player would receive a car object for use in the game. In another example, the player could receive a special feature such as a special bonus, additional credits, free play and/or a special bonus game.


One example of the implementation of a feature-triggering bonus will be explained with reference to FIGS. 11A and 11B. As illustrated in FIG. 11A, a gaming machine 2000 may be configured to present a game called “Honey Bear.” In this instance, the game is a slot-style game (e.g. it may be a true Class III slot game or might be a Class II game, such as a bingo game, where the results of the Class II game are represented or displayed in a slot-style format) in which game symbols 11000 are displayed to a player, such as part of a main game display 11002. The base game may be played as a wager-based game where various outcomes (combinations of displayed symbols) are losing (and the player loses their wager) and one or more outcomes are defined as winning (and preferably result in an award to the player, such as an award of winnings in the form of monetary value credits or the like). As indicated herein, the invention may be implemented relative to any variety of games now known or later developed, such that FIG. 11A simply represents one possible embodiment of the invention.


As illustrated, the gaming machine 2000 might also include one or more secondary displays 11004 of information, such as to display other information regarding the game or features thereof. In one embodiment, the game may include one or more secondary features, such as a bonus game. In one embodiment, the bonus game might be triggered randomly or, as illustrated, based upon a combination of certain symbols, such as 3 or more “bonus” symbols in the base game as illustrated in FIG. 11A.


Normally, upon such an occurrence, a bonus game might be presented to the player. The bonus game might offer the player an opportunity for an increased or additional award. As illustrated in FIG. 11B, in one embodiment, the player might pick from a number of displayed honey pots which reveal associated bonus value awards 11006. The player might then be permitted to select from one or more cards 11008 which provide or reveal a multiplier value which is applied to the bonus value awards, thus providing a final bonus award value.


In one embodiment of the invention, a feature trigger of the invention results in the player being awarded a higher multiplier or multiple of their bonus award in the “Honey Bear” bonus. A player might be issued a cash-value ticket or a promotional ticket having the feature trigger associated with it, as described above (such as by engaging in a transaction at a kiosk, etc., including a configuration where the player accepts the offer to play the “Honey Bear” machine in order to receive the feature trigger). The player may then approach the gaming machine 2000 and insert the ticket. The gaming machine 2000 may read the ticket and, based upon the feature triggering indicia, implement the feature trigger. It will be appreciated that the gaming machine 2000 might be configured to implement the feature by communicating information regarding the ticket to a casino promotional system which verifies the ticket/feature trigger and then causes the gaming machine (directly or via a game server which controls or communicates with the gaming machine) to implement the triggered feature.


In this embodiment, the triggered feature causes the gaming machine 2000 to display information to the player that a “bonus bounty” feature is active, such as illustrated in FIG. 11A. In this manner, the player is informed that the feature has been triggered and the player knows that if they are successful in triggering the bonus feature at the machine, then they will reap the rewards of the triggered feature. Of course, other indicators may be provided to indicate to the player that the bonus or other triggered feature is active. Such might include illumination of a light next to a legend, a displayed legend or other text or graphics or the like. Also, the indicator might be provided at different times. For example, the indicator might be provided to the player before they play a game (for example, by indicating to a player “if you play the Honey Bear game, the Bonus Bounty feature will be active”) or after they start play (for example, after initiating play of the Honey Bear game, the machine might display a pop-up message such as “Congratulations, the Bonus Bounty feature is active”), or the like.


Thus, assuming the player receives a bonus triggering outcome in the base game and then moves to the bonus, the player's bonus award would be increased. As indicated, this increase might comprise an extra multiple of their bet or the like. For example, without the feature being triggered, the player might receive a 2× multiplier as applied to a bonus award of 200 credits, thus resulting in a bonus award of 400 credits. However, due to the triggered feature, the player might thus receive a 3× multiplier applied to the bonus award of 200 credits, thus resulting in an enhanced bonus award of 600 credits. In other words, the base game might offer one or more awards, such as one or more base awards and/or bonus awards. In addition, however, the feature triggering indicia might result in the player being awarded one or more additional awards, such as an additional award to a base award and/or an additional award to a bonus award (and the additional award might comprise an additional or bonus pay table award, a fixed value award, multiplier value of a base or bonus award, a jackpot, progressive jackpot or the like).


In this example, the feature might be awarded or triggered only the first time the player hits the game bonus. However, it could be applied more than once. Of course, the triggered feature might also comprise other types of awards or features as indicated above.


In one embodiment, the triggered feature might time out, expire or the like. For example, if a first player identifies themselves via a player tracking card or the like and inserts a feature triggering ticket, then if that player stops playing and a second player begins play (such as identified by a player tracking card), the triggered feature may be disabled. The feature might also be disabled after a certain period of time, certain amount wagered, certain number of games played, due to a period of time between games played or the like.


In one embodiment of the invention, a ticket having a feature triggering indicia may be used or presented at other than a gaming machine. For example, as illustrated in FIG. 7, such a ticket may be used in conjunction with the play of one or more table games 7050, such as games of blackjack, roulette, craps, war, poker, etc. For example, a patron may hands their ticket to a dealer or attendant who validates the ticket and determines if there are any feature trigger indicia present on the ticket. Alternatively, the dealer or attendant might insert the ticket into a ticket acceptor 7051, scanner 7053 or other reader 7052 that can read the ticket.


In other embodiments the patron might directly insert or present the ticket to the bill acceptor 7051, reader 7052, scanner 7053 or similar device. In such a configuration, one or more game tables may be associated with table game servers 7040 and, optionally, workstations 7020 or 7010, to determine the features of scanned tickets and to provide triggering functionality to the patron based upon the ticket.


When a ticket is processed as described above, it is may be scanned using technology such as optical character recognition (OCR) to determine if there are any ticket feature trigger indicia present on the ticket. If one or more feature triggering indicia are determined to be present on the ticket, the patron is provided with one or more special features for the table game. For example, the special feature may be a matching bet feature where the dealer provides the patron with an amount equal to their current bet which can be played. Or the special feature may be a game bonus providing the table game player with increased payouts, better odds or other similar enhancements to the game specifically for the patron whose ticket has been determined to contain one or more indicia.


The disclosed system may be adapted to any variety of games now known or later developed. Such games include, but are not limited to, poker games, slot games, keno games, bingo games, or even non-gaming machine game formats


In other embodiments, a ticket may have a plurality of bar codes wherein a first bar code is used to validate a cash amount and a second, third, fourth, and so on, bar code may be validated for one or more game feature trigger functionality described herein.


While the tickets described herein may be printed tickets, e.g. tickets comprising information associated with a physical media, the tickets might comprise “e”-tickets, such as electronic data. For example, such tickets might be represented by an image or the like, and might be associated with an email, e-wallet or other electronic information. Thus, references to a player being issued a ticket or presenting a ticket having a feature trigger apply to such configurations. As one example, instead of inserting a ticket into a reader at a gaming machine, a player might display an image of a ticket on their mobile communication device display to an optic reader at a gaming machine, might transfer a virtual or electronic ticket to the gaming machine from an e-wallet or the like. In another embodiment, the feature triggering indicia or condition might be stored in or linked to a player's player tracking account. For example, if the player engages in a transaction at a kiosk and is awarded a feature triggering indicia, that indicia or condition might be stored in or linked to the player's player tracking account. When the player uses their player tracking card at a gaming machine (or otherwise identifies themselves at a gaming machine) the feature triggering indicia may be identified and utilized at the machine, just as if the feature triggering indicia had been read from a physical ticket or the like. In an embodiment where the player is not issued a physical ticket bearing the feature triggering indicia, the player might be provided with a receipt or the like at the kiosk which indicates to the player that they received the feature triggering indicia, that it is linked to their player tracking card, and that it will be used/triggered when the player identifies themselves at a gaming machine for play.


As one example, images of tickets may be used on networked devices such as a smart phone 7030 or touch pad device (e.g. iPAD, iPOD or similar device) 1090 and may connect to the disclosed system over wireless communication device 7054 such as a wireless router to communicate feature tickets electronically.


In other embodiments, an image of the ticket is displayed on the smart phone and scanned using optical image capture technology by the gaming machine, gaming location, and table game. The ticket image may also be detected by the gaming machine, gaming location and table game using other forms of communication such as blue tooth or NFC or RFID wherein the smart phone communicates with the gaming device and communicates trigger feature information.


In yet other embodiments, the ticket may physically include technology associated with Near field Communication (NFC) and Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) or other similar technologies wherein the ticket contains indicia as well as the appropriate physical technology and is then held physically close to a gaming device such as a gaming machine, gaming table or other gaming location within the casino. For example in a table game location with the casino, a reader 7052 detects the ticket when it comes into range at a table game. Using NFC or RFID technology, the ticket is read and it is determined whether the ticket has trigger features associated with it. If it is determined that it does, the features are provided to the patron as described above by either a dealer or attended or automated and awarded to the patron at a table game player station on table 7050.


In other aspects of the disclosure, regulatory indicia or responsible gaming indicia may also be printed on the ticket and may be combined with GCA indicia and/or game manufacturer/brand indicia. For example, if the regulatory agency had special requirements associated with dynamic features present within the gaming machine, the regulatory logo indicia may be used as a feature trigger that confirms regulatory approval or which specific features may be triggered within that gaming jurisdiction. When responsible gaming indicia is printed on a particular cash ticket, the feature trigger information may limit forms of game play, rate of game play or other responsible gaming related features affecting game play. For example, such responsible gaming indicia may be printed on tickets over a certain cash value or for patrons who have used the system kiosk more than one time within a predefined time interval.


As indicated above, a ticket may include or may not include one or more feature triggering indicia. In this regard, feature triggering indicia may be included on tickets based upon various criteria. For example, feature triggering indicia could be included on tickets randomly. In other embodiments, every ticket could include at least one feature triggering indicia. In yet other embodiments, feature triggering indicia might be included on tickets at certain times (such as on certain days or during slow periods). For example, the feature triggering indicia may be used as a promotional feature to entice game play. Featuring triggering indicia might be included or might vary based upon the value of the ticket. For example, a first player who obtains a ticket having an associated monetary value of $100 may receive a lower value feature triggering indicia than a second player who obtains a ticket having an associated value of $1000.


In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the feature which is triggered at a gaming machine by presentation of a ticket having a feature triggering indicia is a feature which would not otherwise have been triggered at the gaming machine as a result of the player's presentation of a ticket which did not include the feature triggering indicia. In other embodiments, the feature might be one that is entirely unique and would not be presented at the gaming machine at any time except in the event that a ticket bearing the feature triggering indicia is presented.


In another embodiment of the invention, particularly illustrated in FIG. 8, feature triggering indicia may include or be associated with a code such as a barcode. In such a configuration, the feature triggering indicia may provide a visual notification to a player that the ticket includes a feature trigger. In addition, however, the code may be used to validate the feature triggering indicia (and thus prevent, for example, a player from stamping a ticket with a feature triggering indicia and causing a gaming machine to them initiate the feature). For example, the barcode may be printed as part of the feature triggering indicia. In the example illustrated in FIG. 9, a QR code 9000 (developed by Toyota) may be used within the feature triggering indicia to validate the feature triggering indicia prior to enabling of the feature. For example, feature triggering indicia 9100, 9200, and 9300 may further include a QR code 9000 within the indicia. As further illustrated in FIG. 9, casino cash ticket 5000 may include a plurality of feature triggering indicia 9100, 6300, 9300, 9200, and 6700 some of which require validation as described above and others of which do not.


The QR or other code may be read by the media reader of the gaming machine. The gaming machine may use the code to verify the feature triggering indicia. For example, in one embodiment of the invention, the kiosks and gaming machines may communicate either directly or indirectly with a promotions server. The promotions server may be configured to generate feature triggering indicia codes and then transmit them to kiosks for use. The kiosk may print a feature triggering indicia having an assigned code onto a ticket. The player may then present the ticket to the gaming machine which reads the code. The gaming machine may forward the code to the promotions server (either directly, or indirectly through one or more other systems, such as a casino accounting system) to validate it, such as to ensure that it is a validate code and that the code has not already been redeemed. Once the code has been used or redeemed, the promotions server may close or flag the code from further use. Upon validation, the promotions server may send instructions to the gaming machine to implement the feature.


In such a configuration, the promotions server might transmit the feature triggering codes or indicia, or instructions to print the same at the kiosk, in response to a kiosk transmitting information to the promotions server regarding a user transaction at the kiosk. The promotions server may determine whether the transaction qualifies or triggers a feature triggering indicia, such as based upon the criteria noted herein (including randomly). As noted herein, while the promotions server might cause the kiosk to print the feature triggering indicia or code on a ticket which is dispensed by the kiosk, in another embodiment the promotions server might transmit feature triggering indicia or an indication of such to a player tracking system for associating or linking to the player's player tracking account (for example, if the player uses their player tracking card at the kiosk, the card information may be used to identify the player's account, whereby information regarding the awarded feature triggering indicia may be stored with the player's account via communications between the promotions server and the player tracking system).


In one embodiment, the feature triggering indicia code may actually define the feature to be triggered and/or any associated criteria. In this arrangement, the while the feature triggering indicia may include an icon or symbol which is useful in identifying the existence of such a feature to the player, the associated code may be what is read by the gaming machine and then used to trigger the feature. For example, a particular code may identify that the feature to be triggered is “10 bonus credits” and that associated criteria, such as “only award credits if the ticket is present on a weekday.”


One advantage of the invention is that feature triggering indicia may be utilized to implement various game features without gaming system changes which may require regulatory approval (and thus would slow down implementation of the feature). First, some feature may be implemented without even changing the main configuration of a gaming machine. For example, a gaming machine may already be programmed to indicate credits. A feature such as increasing the number of credits could easily be implemented by causing the bill validator to send a signal to the gaming machine controller in response to the detection of a particular feature triggering indicia, which signal causes the gaming machine to increase the number of credits just as if paper currency were provided to the bill acceptor. In other instances, features may easily be implemented by only changing the gaming machine code and not the system code. For example, as indicated above, game software at a gaming machine could be configured to cause a certain bonus game to be presented in the event the gaming machine detects a particular feature triggering indicia.


It will be understood that the above described arrangements of apparatus and the method there from are merely illustrative of applications of the principles of this invention and many other embodiments and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the claims.

Claims
  • 1. A system for a casino comprising: at least one kiosk, said at least one kiosk comprising a media reader, a processor, a memory and machine-readable code stored in said memory and executable by said processor to implement a desired financial transaction based upon a media presented by a player to said media reader, and to transmit information regarding said financial transaction; andat least one server, said at least one server in communication with said at least one kiosk and a gaming machine, said at least one server comprising a processor, a memory and machine-readable code stored in said memory and executable by said processor to, in response to receiving said information regarding said financial transaction from said kiosk, generate information regarding at least one feature triggering indicia operable to initiate at least one game feature in a wagering game at said gaming device and to store, in said memory, said information regarding said at least one feature triggering indicia and in response to a request received from said gaming device to use said at least one feature triggering indicia at from said gaming device, process said request.
  • 2. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said media reader comprises a value ticket reader and said desired financial transaction comprises a cash-out of a value ticket presented to said value ticket reader.
  • 3. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said at least one kiosk further comprises at least one cash or currency dispensing device and said processor is configured to cause said at least one cash or currency dispensing device to issue cash or currency as a result of processing of said desired financial transaction.
  • 4. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said media reader comprises a financial card reader and said desired financial transaction comprises accessing funds from an account associated with a financial card presented to said financial card reader.
  • 5. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein the at least one feature triggering indicia is associated with an electronic wallet of the player.
  • 6. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein the at least one feature triggering indica is associated with a player tracking account of the player.
  • 7. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said information regarding at least one feature triggering indicia comprises an image of said indicia.
  • 8. The system for a casino of claim 7, wherein said server or said at least one server transmits said image of said indicia to a device of said player.
  • 9. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said processor of said server is configured to process said request by utilizing information received by said gaming device to access said information regarding said at least one feature triggering indicia.
  • 10. The system for a casino of claim 9, wherein said information received by said gaming device comprises an image of said at least one feature triggering indicia.
  • 11. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said processor of said server is configured to process said request by validating said at least one feature triggering indicia.
  • 12. The system for a casino of claim 1, wherein said kiosk further comprises a printer and wherein said kiosk is configured to issue a receipt from said printer, said receipt having information regarding said at least one feature triggering indicia associated therewith.
  • 13. A method of presenting a feature at a wagering game based upon a feature triggering indicia, said method comprising: receiving input from a player to a kiosk of a desired financial transaction;processing said financial transaction;generating, at a server in communication with said kiosk, information regarding at least one feature triggering indicia;storing said information regarding said at least one feature triggering indicia;processing, at said server, a request received from a gaming device to use said at least one feature triggering indicia at said gaming device; andimplementing at least one game feature at said wagering game presented at said gaming device in response to at least one feature triggering indicia.
  • 14. The method of claim 13, wherein said gaming device comprises a gaming table.
  • 15. The method of claim 13, wherein said information regarding said at least one feature triggering indicia is associated with an account of said player.
  • 16. The method of claim 13, wherein said input comprises input of currency and/or coins to said kiosk and said processing comprises the step of crediting said currency and/or coins at said kiosk.
  • 17. The method of claim 13, wherein said at least one feature triggering indicia is dependent upon at least one characteristic of said desired financial transaction.
  • 18. The method of claim 13, further comprising transmitting to a device of said player an image of said at least one feature triggering indicia.
  • 19. The method of claim 13, wherein said step of implementing comprises transmitting, from said server to said gaming device, a command to implement said at least one game feature.
PATENT APPLICATION DATA

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/673,764, filed Nov. 4, 2019, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/131,838, filed Sep. 14, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,475,285, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/375,580, filed Dec. 12, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,078,941, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/272,672, filed Sep. 22, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,055,937, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/821,876, filed Aug. 10, 2015, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,564,023, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/472,791, filed Aug. 29, 2014, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,105,153, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/627,298, filed Sep. 26, 2012, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,821,259, and claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/540,852, filed on Sep. 29, 2011. The present application claims priority to each of said applications and incorporates by reference each of said applications as if set forth fully herein.

US Referenced Citations (69)
Number Name Date Kind
5290033 Bittner Mar 1994 A
6048269 Burns et al. Apr 2000 A
6394907 Rowe May 2002 B1
6682421 Rowe et al. Jan 2004 B1
6729957 Burns et al. May 2004 B2
6729958 Burns et al. May 2004 B2
6736725 Burns et al. May 2004 B2
6852031 Rowe Feb 2005 B1
7100916 Kelly et al. Sep 2006 B2
7275991 Burns et al. Oct 2007 B2
7455591 Nguyen Nov 2008 B2
7674177 Cole Mar 2010 B2
7785193 Paulsen et al. Aug 2010 B2
7896739 Cole Mar 2011 B2
8251791 Baerlocher et al. Aug 2012 B2
8328636 Jaffe et al. Dec 2012 B2
8671019 Barclay et al. Mar 2014 B1
8821259 Betts et al. Sep 2014 B2
8821292 Betts et al. Sep 2014 B2
9105153 Betts et al. Aug 2015 B2
9153097 Betts et al. Oct 2015 B2
9564023 Richards et al. Feb 2017 B2
9773376 Rajput et al. Sep 2017 B2
9805551 Meyer et al. Oct 2017 B2
10055937 Palermo et al. Aug 2018 B2
10078941 Palermo et al. Sep 2018 B2
10121318 LeMay et al. Nov 2018 B2
10825301 Washington et al. Nov 2020 B2
10984630 Balmer Apr 2021 B1
20030013515 Rowe et al. Jan 2003 A1
20030013531 Rowe et al. Jan 2003 A1
20030087691 Kiely et al. May 2003 A1
20040259622 Duhamel Dec 2004 A1
20050014556 Duhamel Jan 2005 A1
20050059494 Kammler Mar 2005 A1
20050064925 Robb Mar 2005 A1
20050282626 Manfredi et al. Dec 2005 A1
20060073883 Franks, Jr. Apr 2006 A1
20060178208 Cole Aug 2006 A1
20070129136 Walker et al. Jun 2007 A1
20070213124 Walker et al. Sep 2007 A1
20090005154 Schultz Jan 2009 A1
20090111572 Bigelow, Jr. et al. Apr 2009 A1
20090124333 Nelson et al. May 2009 A1
20090242635 Meier et al. Oct 2009 A1
20100029373 Graham et al. Feb 2010 A1
20100041472 Gagner et al. Feb 2010 A1
20100137059 Cole Jun 2010 A1
20100227670 Arezine et al. Sep 2010 A1
20110014975 Grabiec et al. Jan 2011 A1
20110130195 Cole Jun 2011 A1
20110183745 Gagner et al. Jul 2011 A1
20110183747 Cole Jul 2011 A1
20110300926 Englman et al. Dec 2011 A1
20120179602 Wheelock Jul 2012 A1
20120215608 Paulos et al. Aug 2012 A1
20130059648 Rowe Mar 2013 A1
20130116037 Acres May 2013 A1
20140057703 LeStrange Feb 2014 A1
20140073417 Castle et al. Mar 2014 A1
20140087842 Betts et al. Mar 2014 A1
20140087880 Betts et al. Mar 2014 A1
20140206424 Taylor Jul 2014 A1
20140302915 Lyons et al. Oct 2014 A1
20140323206 Gagner et al. Oct 2014 A1
20150006351 Dickerson-Wright Jan 2015 A1
20150194020 Lemendola et al. Jul 2015 A1
20160027252 Warner Jan 2016 A1
20160098903 Richards et al. Apr 2016 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
0919965 Jun 1999 EP
09215812 Aug 1997 JP
2005052226 Mar 2005 JP
1020080070625 Jul 2008 KR
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry
Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report and the Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority, or the Declaration dated Mar. 11, 2013, for PCT/US2012/056815, 8 pages.
Notification of Transmittal of the International Search Report and the Written Opinion of the International Searching Authority, or the Declaration dated Mar. 11, 2013, for PCT/US2012/056807, 8 pages.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20210407255 A1 Dec 2021 US
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
61540852 Sep 2011 US
Continuations (5)
Number Date Country
Parent 16673764 Nov 2019 US
Child 17467766 US
Parent 16131838 Sep 2018 US
Child 16673764 US
Parent 15375580 Dec 2016 US
Child 16131838 US
Parent 15272672 Sep 2016 US
Child 15375580 US
Parent 13627298 Sep 2012 US
Child 14472791 US
Continuation in Parts (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 14821876 Aug 2015 US
Child 15272672 US
Parent 14472791 Aug 2014 US
Child 14821876 US