- On Friday, a Las Vegas tourist hit a jackpot on a progressive slot machine at MGM that had not been hit in 15 years, according to media reports. MGM confirmed the news. The prize was $2.4 million.
- Anyone familiar with the lore surrounding the famed Lion’s Share slot machine, formerly at MGM Grand, is aware of these “facts”: 1) The Lion’s Share slot machine was a hold-over from an earlier time in Las Vegas, and there was just one Lion’s Share left on the casino floor for years.
You pay the remaining balance when you check out. Pick Your Machine. Take a chance and spin to win. MGM Springfield holds the largest gaming floor in Massachusetts. More machines mean more opportunity. Willy Wonka’s sweet world comes to life with sugary bonuses galore! The lovable Oompa Loompa Feature, the Wonka Winko.
Saw this:the machine on the right seems better than the one on the left.
then I thought 'When is a slot machine (in general) worth playing?
(assume it's set to the higher of:
-minimum payout allowed by state law
-minimal payout possible by the manufacturer)
Found out Reset amount is $5k
:o
It all depends on the cycle . Powerball earlier in the year was an edge but not worth playing , I find games all the time that are huge progressives above the reset but still not worth a dollar from my pocket
Powerball earlier in the year was an edge but not worth playing
Disagree on the first part: there was a 1 in 292 million chance of hitting a jackpot worth a lump sum of $561 million (after federal taxes; if you bought your ticket or live in 37 of the 44 states that sell powerball, it would be reduced even further from state taxes). Unfortunately, given that the previous drawing sold over 400 million tickets, the chance of a split took away any possible edge.
Though I agree on the second part, perhaps 100 million Americans disagree: even without an edge they all still thought it was worth playing
Mgm Slot Machine Never Paid Out Crossword
Thanks for reminding me to pick up some mega millions tickets.
Disagree on the first part: there was a 1 in 292 million chance of hitting a jackpot worth a lump sum of $561 million (after federal taxes; if you bought your ticket or live in 37 of the 44 states that sell powerball, it would be reduced even further from state taxes). Unfortunately, given that the previous drawing sold over 400 million tickets, the chance of a split took away any possible edge.
Though I agree on the second part, perhaps 100 million Americans disagree: even without an edge they all still thought it was worth playing