fruitypie wrote:
1. £25 Jack Golden Game. Played all 3 2 were full fired in 460 notes for a return of 290.
2. £35 Jack Party Time Double Decker. Played all 3 1 was full 600 notes in for a return of 330.
3. £500 Jack Party Games Super Gambler. Fired in around 300 for a return of 440 (Played 10 quid super bet any chance I got)
4 £500 Jack Rainbow Riches. Fired in 1400 for a return of 720.
5 £500 Jack Rainbow Riches. Another 1 on site. Fired in 1000 for a return of 620.
6 £500 Jack Elvis Top 20. Fired in 700 for a return of 390.
7 £35 Jack Rainbow Riches. Fired in 480 for a return of 320.
8. £500 Party Games Slotto. Fired in 860 for a return of 390.
What I wanna know is how did this guy get such value out of all those b3's?
And there was a small mixture of the odd 20-60 quid in various other machines over the week with very little return. So I am down nearly 3 grand this week and tbh I am really fkd off with slots. Some serious candy has been parted with. I may take a week or two off from playing. But when I wake up on Saturday I may decide different the lucks gotta change.[/quote]
I wouldn't say you have bad luck on B3s PMK. It's what normal people experience every day of the week. B3s offer awful value for money.
You'd think reading some posts that you can nip out on your lunchbreak and bag a few pots, but in reality a session of any reasonable length (10 mins+) is likely to cost you hundreds.
I don't believe these are as truly random as many still state, I'd also be sceptical they make percentage. On line poker and FOBT roulette are both rigged.
Not worth a quid, or even 10p to make up a £1 credit, well maybe the 10p but not much more.
ok, my bad, you are unluckier than average. From speaking to arcade regulars, on any session the average loss is about £300. A session being playing until you get a pot or big roll in, big win.
If you want to get involved on two days running, with average luck you may get a £700 loss and then a £100 profit the next day. Both sessions will be about £2500 of credits played in length, making you wonder where the extra % has gone.