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Ask the Slot Expert: Was I cheated by this slot machine?21 October 2015
It can be very difficult to figure out the paylines on a multi-line slot machine, regardless of whether it's a video slot or a reel-spinning slot like the machine you played. Even though symbols land near each other on adjacent reels, those positions may not make up one of the paylines. Each machine must show you the positions on each reel that make up each payline. You can go back to that machine and find the paylines on the glass or on one of the help screens. You'll see that the three positions on which the Top Dollar symbols landed are not part of a payline. Finally, if you believe that the casinos are rigging the machines against you, don't play them.
My mother was an elementary school librarian, so I grew up with Willy Wonka, only we knew the story as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, of course. Your chances of hitting any winning combination are the same on every spin. If you kept track of your results, you'd find that sometimes the machine was "warm" before you'd played $100. The machine has never "paid out all it's going to pay," moreover, because the odds don't change from spin to spin. Double-check the paytable on the machine. I believe that the only advantage you have for playing the max bet is to be eligible to hit the linked progressive in which the machine participates. Your chances of hitting that progressive are so low, I don't think it's worthwhile to make the max bet. Another reason to decrease your bet is that most slot directors order low long-term paybacks on their video slots, despite the fact that some of the machine have 50-cent or higher minimum bets and many players play more than the minimum. At $3.50 per spin, you should be receiving the payback of a dollar machine, but you're probably not getting anything near that payback. Here are my suggestions: Stop playing the max bet. Either consistently play a smaller bet or alter your bet from spin to spin. You could start with a medium-sized bet and increase it if you're doing well and decrease it if you're not. You could also start with a medium-sized bet and go up one step with each winning spin; go back to the medium bet after a losing spin. You could also go from the minimum bet to the maximum bet, going up one step after each spin, and then turn around and go back down one step after each spin. The whole point of these little tricks is to keep from betting the maximum on every spin. Betting less will stretch your bankroll. As for when you should walk away, there's no way to know when a hot machine will turn cold -- or a cold machine will turn hot. As I said before, the odds don't change. I suggest you stop playing when it's no longer fun, you've lost your allotted session bankroll or it's time to leave. When you're tempted to hit the button one last time, really make it one last time. If you lose, walk away. If you win, keep playing until you have a losing spin and then walk away. 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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