Progressive Networked Slot Machines
Dear Mark,
A few questions if I may regarding progressive, networked
slot machines. If player A is playing in one location,
and
player B in another, are the odds of hitting a jackpot
the same? Does one machine know what the other machine
is
paying?
Now the sixty-four dollar (obviously much more on
a progressive machine) question: What would happen
if two
players hit a progressive, network slot machine before
it was reset? Amber D.
Well, Amber, so long as Players A and B are playing
for the same single jackpot, both machines must have
the same chance of
coughing up that jackpot. This applies to machines
linked to other machines on the same bank, inside
the same casino, over a
network of machines in different casinos, and even
to machines in different citiesa clear benefit
for closet-gamblers.
All small jackpots are paid directly at and by the
casino or by the machine itself, while the progressive
jackpot is paid from a
"progressive pot" which is generally set
at 5-10 percent of the value of all coins inserted.
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As to your sixty-four
dollar question, yes, the extraterrestrial possibility
exists that when Player A hits the jackpot, Player
B
could hit the same jackpot milliseconds later, before
the jackpot is reset to its starting amount.
These mega-jackpots can go months, if not years before
being hit,
so the possibilities of this happening are I¹ll-eat-my-hat
unfathomable, about the same as for a needle falling
onto a bottle with a ship model inside and balancing
on its point for sevenyears.
But, if the astronomically improbable did happen,
the first winner would win the jackpot and the second,
or P-O¹d winner, would get the starting amount
of the new reset jackpot.
Incidentally, Amber, did you know the "sixty-four
dollar" question has gambling roots? It originated
from a popular radio quiz
show in the US in the 1940s that offered $64 as the
top prize. The first question carried a prize of $1,
and the prize amount
doubled with each successive question: $2, 4, 8, 16,
and 32, culminating in the $64 question. Later, corporate
suits thought
that too measly a win and upped it to the "sixty-four-thousand
dollar" question you are probably familiar with.
Dear Mark,
From your column and my last few casino visits, I
have just discovered, and now enjoy playing, Three-card
Poker.
Just how long has three-card poker been around? Mike
B.
In 1994, Derek Webb developed
three Card Poker, initially for British casinos. But
it soon emigrated across the Pond and can
now be found everywhere in the States. Its ancient
lineage traces to a popular British game called Brag,
one of the many proud
ancestors of poker. Edmond Hoyle had written about
Brag as early as 1751.
In 1999, ShuffleMaster acquired Three Card Poker.
Many like yourself enjoy the fast pace, favorable
odds, and high
frequency of winning hands in Three Card Poker. According
to ShuffleMaster, Three Card Poker is now the country¹s
fastest
growing specialty table game, both in units played
and in revenue generated.Gambling quote of the week:
"Taunting the odds is a little sexy, a little
dangerous, and straddles the line between unimagined
success and nauseating failure." Chad Millman,
The Odds
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