Written by Marc Cooper, Los Angeles Times.
THE more you play slot machines, the more you will lose. It's common wisdom, but still it bears repeating.
I wasn't three minutes into one of the slot tournaments that can be found throughout this city when I swear that the woman competing next to me had broken out in a sweat. Furiously pounding the "Spin Reels" button, hunched over the screen and chanting, "Come on, big numbers! Big numbers!"
I was doing pretty much the same, except I was embarrassed enough to keep my praying silent.
So let's get right to the point about America's favorite gambling devices. Slots should be played only for fun and entertainment — and absolutely never with any expectation of winning. Anyone who tells you he has a system to beat the slots is on tilt. There are no systems. There is no such thing as a hot or cold machine. And there isn't a single machine among the 800,000 in the U.S. that is "due" to pay out in the next five minutes — or even the next five days. And when one does erupt, it might do it again two minutes later. Or maybe not for two more years.
The steely, unforgiving heart at the center of each machine is a micro-processor called an RNG, a "random number generator." It's precisely programmed to determine how much of the gross intake the machine will return to the players and what the frequency of those payoffs will be. Even while the machine isn't in play, it's coldly clicking through an astonishing 200 million numerical combinations per second. The instant you pull the handle or push the button on the machine, your fate is sealed.
Forget about luck or even about loose gears in the reels. The mechanical reels or video readouts on the machine are but visual presentations of the internal computer's predetermined outcome of the spin.
So the only real choice is how you most prefer to lose your money.
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