Slot Machines - The Basics
By Tom McBroom
Slot machines are by far the easiest
- and one of the most fun - games in the casino to play. Simply insert
your coin and pull the handle. One of the oldest jokes in the world is
to call slot machines "one armed bandits" because - with some of the highest
odds against you in the casino, that is exactly what they were - and still
are! However, it's now more appropriate to simply call them bandits, because
you don't have to pull the handle anymore - just push a button. Electrical
motors and computer chips do everything else.
HOW SLOT MACHINES WORK
Decades ago, when slot machines were
young, they were basically mechanical devices. The force of the handle
being pulled down turned the metal gears that turned the wheels on the
machine.
Later on, electrical motors were
added to turn the wheels and the force of the handle being pulled no longer
had any bearing on the results. In fact, you no longer had to pull the
handle, since the wheels were electrical. All you had to do was push the
"play" button to start the wheels. The odds were controlled by how many
winning symbols were on each wheel.
More recently, most casinos have
are converting to computerized slot machines that no longer have wheels
at all - just a computer screen that plays a video simulating spinning
wheels. A computer "random number generator" determines the results. As
soon as you put your coins in, the result is predetermined.
Whether you pull the handle slow
or fast, whether you use the handle or the play button, whether a jackpot
has recently been paid on that machine or not, none of these has any bearing
on the result. It's randomly determined each time by the computer. The
casino can set the payout high or low simply by changing the computer program,
although they are carefully regulated by the state to ensure the numbers
are truly randomly generated and that the overall payout percentage is
what the casino says it is.
Since the results are completely
random with each play, the fact that a machine hasn't paid a jackpot for
a long time doesn't mean that it's "ready" to pay. Conversely, a machine
can pay several jackpots in a row. It's simply impossible to tell if a
machine is ready to pay a jackpot.
As the saying goes, "You pay your
money and you takes your chances."
Good luck!
Tom is the webmaster at http://www.blackjack-for-everyone.com,
which is a website dedicated to turning beginning Blackjack players into
serious recreational players.
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