Carnival Corporation will continue rolling out the SYNKROS system across its full portfolio of cruise lines

Konami Gaming has successfully installed its SYNKROS casino management system on a second cruise line for the world’s leading cruise company, Carnival Corporation.

After installing its gaming systems across Holland America Line, Konami has now outfitted all 29 Carnival Cruise Line ships with its SYNKROS system. 

Known internally under the acronym “SURF” for “Serving Up Rewards and Fun”, guests across the Carnival Cruise Line fleet can now tap into personalized rewards, offers, bonuses and cashless wagering across thousands of gaming machines in the onboard casinos. 

“We’re obsessed with giving guests the best time possible with great service, standout rewards and innovation that raises the fun factor even higher, so it’s been fantastic to roll out SURF across the entire Carnival Cruise Line fleet and make the guest experience even more rewarding,” said Marty Goldman, senior vice president of global gaming at Carnival Corporation. “We look forward to bringing these exciting gaming experiences to millions more, as SURF continues to expand across Carnival Corporation’s world-class portfolio.” 

Tom Jingoli, president and chief operating officer at Konami Gaming, commented: “Carnival Corporation continues to innovate the guest experience in every detail of the journey, demonstrated in exciting new ways across the combined 40 onboard casinos of Carnival Cruise Line and Holland America Line now live with top SYNKROS technology.

“Konami is committed to serving Carnival Corporation’s existing SYNKROS install base with trust and reliability, while partnering collaboratively through ongoing expansion fleetwide.” 

Carnival Corporation is slated to continue rolling SYNKROS enterprise-wide, including to its full portfolio of cruise lines, which includes AIDA Cruises, Costa Cruises, Cunard, P&O Cruises, Princess Cruises and Seabourn. 

Shares in Konami Gaming parent company Konami Gaming Corp. (TYO:9766) closed 0.98 per cent lower at ¥19,235.00 in Tokyo Thursday.