Ask The Slot Expert
Dear Mr. Robison,
Is there any slot machine where you play for gold or silver tokens instead of normal coinage?
Thank you,
John Handy
Dear John,
Anchor Gaming used to make machines called Silver Strike that paid silver collector's coins for certain combinations. I'm not sure if they still make them now that they've been acquired by IGT.
I've also seen some specialty slot machines on which the jackpot was gold or silver coins produced especially for the machines, but I haven't seen any machines like these recently.
Best of luck in and out of the casinos,
John
My casino is changing the nine/six machines to nine/five, and the eight/five machines to eight/six.
My question is which machine is the better machine?
Thank you,
Doug
Dear Doug,
Assuming that we're talking about Jacks or Better machines here, with mathematically perfect play the 9/6 game pays back 99.54%, the 9/5 game 98.45%, the 8/6 game 98.39%, and the 8/5 game 97.30%.
Best of luck in and out of the casinos,
John
Hello John and thank you for this forum.
My question is: I live in Northern California and we have Native American casinos in our state. I have not seen or noticed any signs like they have in Nevada to declare any kind of payback percentage. Do you know if they are exempt from this? And if they are, is there any way to tell whether one Indian casino pays back more than another?
Thank you for your reply.
Sincerely,
Kent
Dear Kent,
I don't know what the regulations are in California. It's possible that the casinos are prohibited from posting payback percentages, but I don't think that's the case because I think I've seen paybacks posted in San Diego casinos.
In any event, Nevada's casinos post payback percentages in order to compete with the casinos next door. California's casinos don't have the same competitive pressures because there are fewer casinos and they're farther apart.
Nevertheless I think there is a way to make a fairly reliable guess as to which casinos have high-paying slots. Take a look at each casino's video poker offerings. Casinos with high-paying video poker tend to have high-paying slots too.
Best of luck in and out of the casinos,
John
Dear John,
In considering video poker payouts, how much would a high payout be? In my ignorance I thought they were all paying the same amounts.
Thank you for your reply.
Sincerely,
Kent
Dear Kent,
You can tell the payback of a video poker machine by looking at its paytable. My book The Slot Expert's Guide to Playing Slots has a few charts that show the paybacks for common video poker paytables. You can also find the paybacks for popular paytables in any video poker book.
I'd consider any paytable that pays back 99% or above to be a high-paying paytable.
Best of luck in and out of the casinos,
John
Send your slot and video poker questions to John Robison, Slot Expert, at slotexpert@comcast.net.
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