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Ask the Slot Expert: Is the deal of cards on a video poker machine as random and unbiased as someone dealing a real deck of cards?28 February 2018
Answer: You're right. In 2013, New York's voters approved a constitutional amendment to allow casino gambling in up to seven casinos in the state. The Montreign casino, now known as Resorts World Catskills, is one of the casinos not run by the New York State Lottery. The casino has table games and should have slot machines with internal RNGs, just like in Atlantic City down (way down) the road. Thanks for the correction.
Answer: Yes, I am saying that a video poker machine will deal a hand with good potential exactly as frequently as Uncle John at the kitchen table teaching his nephews how to play poker, much to the consternation of their parents. Nevada has a regulation that any electronic gaming device operated or manufactured in the state that mimics a real world game must have the same odds as the real world game. Video roulette must have the same odds as the spinning roulette wheel. Video blackjack must have the same odds as the game dealt at the blackjack table. Hands on a video poker machine must have the same odds of being dealt as the same hands at a poker table.
Answer: I've never had a two-royal day, but I know someone who has. I have had a two-royal week and a four-royal month (not counting a few $400 royals playing dime hundred play). One of John Grochowski's readers had the ultimate good luck story. Hit reader hit back-to-back royals. My best story of hitting multiple jackpots on one machine is hitting 4 Deuces three times on one machine. The Big Time Bonus at Red Rock had just gone over $19,700 and was going to hit at any moment. Everyone at the bank at which I was playing had been there for about an hour and nobody was going to leave until the bonus hit. I ended up playing over 3000 hands on that machine. (By the way, you hit 4 Deuces on NSU Deuces roughly every 5347, on the average.)
Answer: We're not in on the the slot director's thought process, so it's impossible to figure out some of the decisions he or she made. The mix of machines in the high limit rooms has gotten a bit wacky since the video slot revolution. The rooms used to just have $2, $5, $10 and higher versions of the same reel-spinning games on the main slot floor. Now they also have some higher denominations of the video slots, but I rarely see anyone play them. In my unscientific observations, it seems like the higher limit players prefer to play traditional reel-spinning slots and the video slot players want to bet a max of $5 to $10 per spin. Another unscientific observation is that I frequently see players betting more per spin or hand on the main slot floor than some of the players in the high limit room. In addition to video slots not being popular with high limit players, one more possible reason why there is only one Stinkin' Rich machine in your high limit room is that there is limited space in the room and so many different video slot themes. There isn't enough room for more than one of any machine — video or reel-spinning — unless it's a really popular title. Send your slot and video poker questions to John Robison, Slot Expert™, at slotexpert@slotexpert.com. Because of the volume of mail I receive, I regret that I can't reply to every question.
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