The History Of Keno
Keno was introduced in 200 BC by the Chinese military leader,
Cheung Leung who used this game as a finance resource for his
failing army. He used this game as a finance resource to help
his failing army. The city of Cheung was waging a war, and after
awhile of war time appeared to be facing national famine with
the drastic decrease in supplies. Cheung Leung needed to come up
with a fast fix for the economic disaster and to produce revenue
for his army. He thusly created the game we now know as keno and
it was a great success.
Keno used to be known as the White Pigeon Game, since the
winning numbers were delivered by pigeons from larger cities to
the smaller villages. The lottery 'Keno' was brought to the
United States in the 1800s by Chinese immigrants who came to the
US to work. In those times, Keno was played with 120 numbers.
Keno is generally played with 80 numbers in most of American
based casinos as well as online casinos. Keno is largely enjoyed
today because of the relaxed nature of playing the game and the
simple fact that there are no skills needed to play Keno.
Despite the fact that the odds of winning are terrible, there is
always the chance that you will win quite big with very little
gambling investment.
Today, Keno is played with 80 numbers and 20 numbers are drawn
each game. Players of Keno can choose from 2 to 10 numbers and
bet on them, as much or as little as they want to. The payout of
Keno is according to the bets made and the roll out of matching
numbers.
The 'thousand character classic' is the heritage produced by
keno history-a Chinese poem of 1000 numbers, which is known as a
set of independent characters placed in a rhymed form. It was
originally a new way for children to learn, however the poem is
so well know that the characters are often used as a romantic
numbering system. On the original keno boards, instead of using
just numbers, they used these characters.
Keno grew in popularity in the United States near the end of the
19th century when the Chinese characters were replaced with more
familiar, American numbers. Lotteries were not covered under the
legalization of gambling in the state of Nevada in 1931. The
casinos changed the name of the 'Chinese lottery' to 'horse race
keno' utilizing the idea that the numbers are horses and you
want your horses to come in. When a law passed that taxed off
track betting, Nevada swiftly changed the name to 'keno'.