Chemin de Fer once ruled the private gaming rooms of Europe. Long before digital tables, guests in Monte Carlo, Paris and northern Italy sat around a quiet, elegant table—deciding who would take the shoe, call Banco, and embrace the risk of being Banker.
Unlike modern casino games, Chemin de Fer is about rhythm, psychology and etiquette. It is a ritual. A negotiation. A dance of small gestures and tension.
Historically, Chemin de Fer was the preferred game of diplomats, aristocrats and connoisseurs. It offered a focused, strategic environment—far away from the noise of roulette wheels and slot machines. A single table. A few players. A private experience.
In early James Bond films, Chemin de Fer appears frequently—not as spectacle, but as a test of composure. Calm decisions. Subtle power shifts. No distractions.
Our digital Salon embraces this same spirit without copying any movie scene: elegance, tension and the psychological art of Banco.