Believe me, I won't try and f##k you - I'm not that way inclined! I have not played these for any length of time, but I will try to offer a possible explanation...mr lugsy wrote:suppose you got the t shirt aswell ,...just a joke , perhaps you could shed light on my original question before this all went sideways, i have observed on our elvis and a nearby arena elvis that a jpt seems to come in an unexplainable ammount of times by any random hypothesis,early in a play session ,twice with my own eyes ive seen this "phenomenon"1st cred, once more by a close friend with witnesses and again buy a regular punter who was gobsmacked.... at least another 6 times i can recall while playing on 50p ihave dropped 125 within a fiver.3 times 500 with 20 pounds ,ihave surveiled cctv for hours uncountable and make a point of watching this machine when anybody walks up to it,many many times ive seen a quick hit pay off on this machine,.....but rarely does it drop the biggun when played for a greater ammount of time even when wads go in. have i indeed seen an improbable long odds occurrence or maybe there is something else about this machine ? i hope you dont try to f##k me with your obvious knowledge of machine code and mathematics,as these are true accounts with more than "a couple of hours" study gone in.
Compensated machines change their odds depending on what they have paid out, so if the machine is miles ahead or behind, the chances it offers will reflect this i.e. a 78% pub AWP might not play a game at 78% if someone has just landed a sizeable win. I've recently done a machine on which the chance of a hold is zero if it is behind by more than 50 quid, and this is reflected in the overall percentage return from game to game.
A random machine can, either by manual or automatic methods, have its payout profile changed, but the key thing is that the percentage return from game to game is consistent. I'm referring to the balance of wins to which 'ob' referred to above.
On the original PGS, the operator could select 'hard' or 'soft' profile. I might be wrong, but it sounds like the machines you are referring to switch profiles themselves depending on play i.e. go into attract mode - switch to an 'all or nothing' setup; after a period of continuous play - switch to a s**t load of small wins.
Like I said the key thing is that the mathematical percentage return remains unchanged. This is not true of a compensated machine.
For your example I'll use ob's analogy of a roulette wheel. Suppose I told you that for your first ten games, you were only allowed to bet on single numbers, after that, anything you like. You might be a jammy git and land your 35-1 in those first ten games - you might not. After that you can do any bet you like i.e. Red/Black Even/Odd etc. Mathematically all bets on roulette return the same over time: there is no 'best bet' as such. You can play 'a big win occasionally' or 'small wins a lot'. Percentage wise they are identical.
Anyone confused? I am!