Casino Pit
Controlled access, strict audit trail, electrical redundancy, and jurisdiction-specific approval language.
Different venues can use the same cabinet category for very different reasons. A cinema lobby wants compact dwell-time capture; a route operator wants serviceable earners; a VR arcade needs bandwidth and reset discipline; a hospitality lounge wants premium equipment that does not disturb the guest journey. Namco classifies each floor by technical constraints first, so the product discussion stays realistic.
A clear floor matrix helps owners avoid underpowered circuits, overloaded wireless networks, inconvenient service panels, and cabinet mixes that look attractive in a catalog but fail under peak conditions. Namco uses this comparison to start structured planning with architects, IT teams, finance, and operations before purchase orders are finalized.
| Floor | Power | Network | Compliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casino Pit | 220V 30A | 10GbE VLAN | GLI-19 sections 3-7, UL Gaming |
| FEC Operator | 110V 20A | 1GbE or WiFi 6 | UL Gaming, ASTM-aware operating SOP |
| Cinema Lobby | 110V 15A | WiFi 6 with POS separation | Landlord vendor approval, electrical listing |
| Cruise Ship | IEC universal planning | VSAT-aware local cache | SOLAS procurement notes, shipboard safety review |
| Route | 110V 15A | 4G LTE or store WiFi | State amusement rules, location agreement support |
| Esports Arena | 208V 30A | 10GbE fiber | UL electrical file, tournament operating policy |
Namco can prepare a working version for your buildout meeting, including power notes, network segmentation, player flow, and service access comments.
Request Matrix PDF