-BO- wrote:
Perusing some stats and am somewhat amazed just how long some people spend playing BT on many days. So after seeing a session where a player was at the same location for over 12 hours (valid scores, no mobile PM) I was wondering just how much a proper tip would be. Worse case scenario they sip tea and eat a meal or two, so one could probably have a tab as little as $25. Best case scenario they drink beer all day and night along with food, that tab could be $100+.
So what do you think the going rate should be for hogging a seat and 1 or more PM's for 12 hours?
As you know, I am writing this response from a number of perspectives: I am a bartender, a restaurant manager and a BT player who has put in marathon sessions playing and will likely do so in the future.
As a player, if I'm at a restaurant for that amount of time, I will be drinking and eating quite a but and likely tipping a hefty bundle, also taking shift changes into consideration. I know several other players around the country who behave in a like fashion. (I'm looking at you, Bill.

.)
Given the number of bartender/server rant blogs out there, people might be surprised that we don't always hate campers at the bar. It really depends on the camper's behavior and demands. Whether you're drinking alcohol or tea, whether you're eating or not, if you are polite and undemanding, we'll forgive poor tipping, by and large. There is a regular at our bar who stays three or more hours at a clip, always drinks five or six beers and always leaves one dollar. But - he is never rude, he never interrupts the bartender when the bartender is helping other guests, he makes conversation with others when they engage him, he doesn't insinuate himself into others' business and he doesn't try to involve himself in the lives of the bar's employees or management. Sure, a bartender wouldn't be able to support himself if this customer were cloned and the clones took over every seat for the whole shift, but not a single one of our staff sees him coming and thinks, "Oh crap, not again." He is actually a most welcome sight.
Conversely, if a patron needs to be hand-held through the entire menu, asks the price of fourteen drinks before ordering something else entirely, interrupts you when you are actually speaking with another guest, flags you down regularly and loudly, asks personal questions, must comment about everything everyone in earshot says, etc., not even a well-above average tip will excuse him or make us happy to see him walk in.
In general, tipping should be a function of quality of service, difficulty of demand (hand-made mojito vs. draft beer, e.g.), duration of stay and total bill. The greater each of those components, the greater should be the gratuity. (I hope this doesn't sound like a whiny bartender rant. I chose this as a career and I've been doing it long enough to know that great customers balance out the shitty ones. Part of the job for a professional is to cultivate the good ones, manage the shittiest ones and possibly to turn the shittier ones into average, or at least passable, ones. Meet or exceed customer expectations and you'll make money.)
In general, management will prefer customers who ring up the largest tabs in the shortest amount of time without bothering other guests. That last part is actually hugely important. If a guest is an asshole and insists on spreading his assholery around him, he'll scare other guests away. If a customer is kind and engaging, he draws other guests in and they spend more. The net effect of the patron on the restaurant in either case might not depend on his particular tab. Buzztime can enhance this effect either way. If the BT camper is causing others to stay and play longer, he's more welcome even if he's drinking tea refills and has one basket of pretzels for five hours. If he's a douchebag and scares others away, it doesn't matter if he runs up a $200 tab by himself. As stated above, a good server will also realize this with regard to tipping.
Bottom line, tipping well is very important, especially if you're a camper.
Not being an asshole is essential, no longer how long you're there.