Encore Boston Harbor killed its $50 table game minimums and parking fees as it seeks to draw crowds beyond the high rollers.

The $2.6 billion Everett resort casino now offers $15 table game minimums and dropped its parking fees for self parking. The company also plans to roll out a tiered card system to offer rewards for a variety of players, said Brian Gullbrants, Encore’s new president.

“The last thing we want to do is be a Vegas casino in Boston. We want to be a Boston casino in Boston," Gullbrants told the Massachusetts Gaming Commission Thursday morning. “We want to be Greater Boston’s hometown casino. And we want everyone to come and feel welcome and like they can have a great time there, whether they are playing or not playing.”

Some of the smaller fees for buses and water shuttles, which cost $7 a trip, will remain in place, Gullbrants said.

Wynn Resorts is known for its opulence and its popularity for high rollers. But some Massachusetts residents noted that the luxury resort and casino’s costs were too steep for the casual gambler.

Gullbrants said the changes make it easier for everyone who visits the resort to play or visit its restaurants.

“We thought we could charge for parking here in Boston, and we were wrong,” he said. “We have now made self-parking free for all guests, 24/7. We thought we could charge for some of the transportation like boats and premiums buses. We were wrong.”

The tiered card program is also designed to offer rewards for a variety of customers, rather than just the top spenders. Encore plans to roll out the program in early 2020.

Over the past five months, Encore has seen strong revenues for table games, which typically attract the top spenders, but low slots numbers. Slots numbers made up less than half of the property’s gross gaming revenue in July, August and September.

In October, Encore saw its lowest gaming revenues yet, earning $22.5 million in gross table game revenues and $22.2 million in slots revenues.

Gullbrants, reviewing the gross gaming revenue, told commissioners the total gross gaming revenue so far exceeded $166 million and $41 million in taxes for the state. He noted that the property will only grow as the company makes leadership changes, mentioning Eric Kraus and Jenny Holaday.

Kraus is two weeks into his job as the senior vice president of communications and public affairs. Holaday recently joined as the executive vice president of operations.

Gullbrants was silent on his own promotion, but he was appointed the new Encore president as Robert DeSalvio stepped down in October.

In a quarterly earnings call earlier this month, Wynn Resorts CEO Matt Maddox told investors the company was making adjustments to better meet the needs of the Boston-area clientele.

“We’re learning each and every day to become more local, make sure we’re giving the customers what they want,“ Maddox said.