Poker Victoria Casino London Average ratng: 4,5/5 3036 reviews

With a fantastic restaurant, amazing bars, sports screens and poker room, The Victoria has the perfect blend of sophistication and excitement. Our dedicated Poker room, one of Europe’s most iconic, hosts the final stage of the GUKPT, the UK’s best Poker Tour, and also holds daily cash games and tournaments. The Poker Room Overview Part of Grosvenor Victoria Casino. Whether you’re a serious player, playing for fun or would like to learn how to play poker, The Poker Room at the Grosvenor Victoria Casino has something for everyone. The Poker Room's weekly tournaments and cash games offer a wide range of games at all levels.

  1. The Poker Room Victoria Casino London
  2. Victoria Casino London Poker
150-162 Edgware Road, London, W2 2DT
020 7262 7777
Poker
Grosvenor Casinos
24 hours 7 days a week
  • Roulette
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  • Three Card Poker
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The Grosvenor Victoria Casino (known as ‘The Vic’) sits in the heart of London and is one of the longest established casinos in the country. 2014 sees The Vic celebrating its 50th anniversary. Spread across three storeys, the casino is situated inside a pleasant building and boasts one of the largest gaming floors in London.

Drivers are able to avail themselves of the casino’s car park and their car valet service, whilst for those using public transport, Edgware Road and Marble Arch tube stations are a five minute walk away and given its central location, it has easy access to London’s main rail stations and airports as well as a plethora of hotels within walking distance.

The casino features 14 Roulette tables, nine Blackjack, four tables each of Three Card Poker and Baccarat, one Super Stud Poker as well as over 60 electronic roulette and slots. The recently refurbished Poker Room is one of the largest in the UK and has 35 tables. Cash games take place around the clock and tournaments run daily. Gamblers can play Hold’em, Omaha and other varieties of poker 24 hours a day seven days a week. A range of stakes are available and a wide range of buy-ins and game types means that all poker players should find a game to suit. The casino holds regular learn to play evenings (see website for details).

The restaurant serves a la carte international cuisine as well as traditional classics and there is a full bar menu available seven days a week. If you fancy something a bit different, ask the steward about the daily specials. There is also a coffee shop with a wide range of coffees and teas to choose from. The smoking terrace is a relaxing seating area which shows live sporting action on giant plasma screens.

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Victoria

User reviews

Matt B
4.0

Good

The Vic is a fairly large casino which is spread over multiple floors. On the top floor, which is where I spend most of my time, you'll find one of the biggest (or rather, the biggest) poker rooms in London.
Cash games start at £1-£1 (10% rake, £5 cap) and the £1-£2 game at the Vic is one of the best value in London - 5% rake with a £10 cap. There are also £2-£5 and £5-£10 games running most nights (5%, £5 cap). Games are mainly hold'em but there is also the occasional PLO table.
The Victoria also run multi table tournaments each night at 7:45 as well as an additional afternoon game on the weekends. Surprisingly, some of these tournaments have no registration fee.
The Vic is also home to a number of large events including legs of the GUKPT.
The quality of play here varies significantly, and there are plenty of donks pooring money onto the tables as well as the resident sharks who take the donks money. Plus there's always a guy at every table who never bluffs and whose play is so predictable they might have well have a copy of Harrington on Hold'em in front of them.
The poker tables and chairs are starting to look a little worn, so it might be time for them to spruce things up a bit!
Also on the top floor is a restaurant that serves a variety of cuisine (standard fare plus, depending on what day it is, thai and chinese offers), a bar (just under £4 a pint) and some electronic roulette terminals.

Matt S
4.0

Not that bad

I think the guy in the review before me has a case of 'my casinos are better than your casinos' syndrome. If you want Vegas, go to Vegas...
The Vic is nice enough - plenty of poker action and the occasional famous face playing. There are also a number of big poker events throughout the year which you can qualify for online or through live satellites. General standard of play varies and some of the locals are pretty good but there are enough fish to go around.
Rest of the casino is pretty standard. Food is similar to what you'd find in a decent london pub - ok but nothing to shout about.
All in all it's a decent casino so long as you're not looking for Vegas flash - for that you'll need to head to the empire on Leicester square.

Randy
2.5

The Poker Room Victoria Casino London

Dissapointing

I flew to London, England for a big poker tournament at the Victoria and was quite dissapointed with what I found. Being from LV I'm used to big flashy casinos, cute cocktail waitresses and wasted tourist on tilt. None of these were at this casino and you even had to PAY for your drinks.
Maybe all casinos in England are like this, but I came with the expectation of the high class gaming you see in the movies. And not once did the Queen or any of her cohorts sit next to me at the poker table.

Table Of Contents

The Grosvenor UK Poker Tour (GUKPT) kicked off its 2020 season in style over the weekend when 379 players piled into The Poker Room at the famous Grosvenor Victoria Casino in the heart of London. These entrants created a mammoth £511,650 prize pool that was shared among the top 34 finishers and it was Artan Dedusha who got his hands on the lion’s share of this money, namely a cool £137,430.

2020 GUKPT London Final Table Results

Victoria Casino London Poker

PlacePlayerPrize
1Artan Dedusha£137,430
2Ben Winsor£91,270
3Patrick Brandt£55,670
4Mo£35,100
5Vicktoria Coren-Mitchell£23,570
6Damian Bell£17,050
7Jack O’Neil£13,040
8Oliver Bithel£11,030
9Paul Siddle£9,030

The money bubble burst just after 9:00 p.m. on Saturday’s Day 2 and it was Pancios Ellianas who was the unfortunate soul to pop it. Down to 40,000 chips at the 3,000/6,000/6,000a level, Ellianas moved all-in with ace-six and Daniel Harwood called with pocket tens. Those tens held and Ellianas busted in 34th place.

Harwood would eventually bust in 24th place for a £3,510 score.

Jean Chanpan Cheong was the first player to collect some prize money for his efforts. The likes of Rick Trigg (32nd - £3,010), GUKPT regular Yiannis Liperis (29th - £3,010), and Haresh Thakker (23rd - £4,010) followed suit.

Day 2 concluded with 17 players in the hunt for the title and Dedusha in the driving seat being the only player with a seven-figure stack.

Paul Tedeschi was a high profile bust out at the start of Day 3. The talented Frenchman got his chips into the middle with king-queen only to run into the queen held by Patrice Brandt. The queens remained the best hand and Tedeschi crashed out in 14th place for £5,310.

Another elite player fell by the wayside when Phil Souki headed to the cashier’s desk with a slip awarding him 13th place money.

The final table was set three hours after Day 3 began. Emrah Cakmak jammed for 11 big blinds with king-ten and Brandt called with ace-queen. Cakmak soared into the lead courtesy of a ten on the flop, but an ace on the river, known as a Greenstein after the legendary Barry Greenstein, sent Cakmak to the showers.

2020 GUKPT London Final Table Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChips
1Patrice Brandt2,045,000
2Artan Dedusha1,225,000
3Damian Bell1,120,000
4Ben Winsor815,000
5Mo740,000
6Victoria Coren-Mitchell625,000
7Oliver Bithell490,000
8Paul Siddle280,000
9Jack O’Neill240,000

Paul Siddle’s appearance at the nine-handed final table was short-lived. He committed 21 big blinds with ace-king only to lose to Ben Winsor’s pocket tens. Siddle has recently won the $2,200 partypoker LIVE MILLIONS UK Warm Up for $23,835.

Oliver Bithnall busted in eighth-place and became the first player to collect a five-figure prize. Bithnell was all-in with king-four on a king-high flop for his last seven big blinds but was out-kicked by the king-jack in the hand of Dedusha.

Seventh-place and £13,040 went to Jack O’Neill. He looked down at ace-trey in the small blind and open-shoved for 17.5 big blinds. Unfortunately for O’Neill, Dedusha was dealt pocket sevens in the big blind and he called. The board ran void of drama and the players at the final table gained a little more elbow room.

Then came the demise of Damian Bell in sixth-place. A seven-high flop with two diamonds was enough for Bell to get his stack in with king-jack of diamonds. A player referred to simply as “Mo” called with ace-queen of diamonds. Neither player improved, but Mo didn’t need to. Game over for Bell.

Coren-Mitchell Loses Coinflip To Bust

Two-time European Poker Tour Main Event championVictoria Coren-Mitchell is no stranger to The Poker Room in London and she would have made a very popular GUKPT London champion. It wasn’t to be, however, as she lost a crucial coinflip against Dedusha. Coren-Mitchell was all-in with ace-king against Dedusha’s pocket threes. The flop gave her an inside straight draw, but the turn and river bricked to send the Only Connect quiz show host to the rail in fifth-place, good for £23,570.

The man with no surname was the next to bust. He lost a huge pot at the hands of Dedusha when his aces were cracked by Dedusha’s set of seven. Tha left Mo with nine big blinds and he busted soon after, while Dedusha stacked up 4,200,000 of the 7,500,000 chips in play.

Heads-up was set 20-minutes later when Dedusha sent Brandt into the dark London night. Brandt pushed his 15 big blinds into the middle with ace-eight and lost to the hot-running Dedusha’s king-queen. Third-place locked up £55,670 for Brandt.

Dedusha held a massive 6,000,000 to 1,500,000 chip advantage over Winsor going into heads-up and it proved too substantial a gap for Winsor to bridge.

It was a coinflip then brought an end to proceedings. Winsor, who last year became the first player to win two GUKPT Grand Finals, chose pocket fives to jam his last 15 big blinds in with. Dedusha called with queen-ten and the race was on. A ten on the turn proved more than enough for Dediusha to win, which resigned Winsor to the £91,270 consolation prize.

Poker

Next up for the GUKPT is a journey north to Manchester from February 23rd. The Main Event here is a £1,110 buy-in affair with £200,000 guaranteed.

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