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Jackpot Party 'Insurance' Bonus - or not!

A novel idea for the next week from JPP. Play ANY slot on ANY stake as long as it's a 20-lines + slot and if you get 20 consecutive spins (including a spin that triggers a feature that pays 0) or more in one unbroken sequence they will give you a £25 cash bonus,

Now, I would like to get this into some sort of perspective. How likely is it? I played a few thousand spins on the VH variance Bruce Lee to test. On average I had a win every 5.4 spins. I went 12 once, 13 once and then 19 and behold! got a minimum win on the 20th,,,,:)

I gave up after a few hours.

I would imagine on random slots this is a very unlikely event. JPP must know something to offer this. How about you people trying it for yourselves on freeplay?

A very different bonus and very original. Attainable? Mmmmm...in theory.
 
It would be something to see someone pull it off.

Yes, it could happen but after years of slot playing it would be quite unlikely to see it. On any slot on any software. I know Chopley loves his JPP bonuses but I would say he would actually be quite scornful of the chances of hitting this one.
 
Yes, it could happen but after years of slot playing it would be quite unlikely to see it. On any slot on any software. I know Chopley loves his JPP bonuses but I would say he would actually be quite scornful of the chances of hitting this one.

Run the simulation and never got over seven spins without a win, a win being anything above or below the stake (pretty obvious), for the record and perhaps to prove the science I did this over 100,000 spins through various browsers and various sites on free play.

I don’t have concrete prove that I did over 100,000 spins but then again I never counted the amount of beans and chips I consumed in the last year, the use of a cocktail stick to individually count the items and the subsequent entry into an excel spread sheet does not appeal.

Back on Earth (for me at least) I’d chance my arm in saying the promotion has more chance of paying out to a left handed lesbian dolphin in the artic sea who never even entered the promotion.

Disclaimer: left handed dolphins have as much chance if they enter the competition as right handed lesbian dolphins or even right-handed gay dolphins or left handed dolphins, perhaps I should stop digging the hole I started now.
 
I had another 2k spins today on HV slots and didn't get close. 14 was the most (once) and quite a few 7's. The bonus that never was, but very clever concept. Some bored JPP employee must've been studying streams of data from slots and realized after a search that this may have happened twice in 10 million plays or something so would be an enticing offer to the unaware and a cheap one for JPP. Respect.
 
If you want a wms slot that goes long time without any wins, you should try the one that reminds jack hammer. Called emperor of rome etc.
Very often goes 10 spins without a win. But yes... 20 spins is another thing. But still, I think that is the slot with the best chances succeeding (is that a word...).
 
It is not that high variance actually, but it behaves kind of like jack hammer, in which I have got numeros time 0,00€ from 15 freespins :D.

The thing is though, under the promotion terms, a 15-spin losing zero-return bonus round would count as ONE spin out of the required 20.
 
I know Chopley loves his JPP bonuses but I would say he would actually be quite scornful of the chances of hitting this one.

Yeah I took one look at this one, laughed my ass off, and then went and did something less boring instead :D

It is worth keeping an eye on Jackpot Party's bonuses though, some of the ones that look dodgy are actually EV+ once you've crunched the numbers on them, but this one is off the scale awful.

Also note when you read the T&C's that you need to be playing at least 20 lines at a penny per line, so you're on a 20p minimum spin.

I reckon you could spin solidly for 24 hours and not see a single £25 'bonus' off this 'promotion' - I'd go as far as to say that they're heading into the realms of dishonest advertising by suggesting to their players that it's 'insurance'. (And also, not even regardless of your stake, as it states in the email!)

insurance.webp

 
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Yes and if you get free spins bonus then its a winning spin :D

No, it's not. If you read their terms a losing spin 'is any spin that returns 0'. That would include a bonus round returning zero if the triggering scatters carry no win themselves.
 
The thing is though, under the promotion terms, a 15-spin losing zero-return bonus round would count as ONE spin out of the required 20.

I just ment that I have got 15 losing spins in a row at jack hammer.
Just to prove my point I deposited 25£ at jackpotparty and started playing Kingdom of the titans (this was the name of the slot :D). After 150-200 spins I got 19 or 20 losing spins. I am not 100% sure wich one was it :D.. I also got a couple times 10 losing spins.
If you want to "beat" (like that is possible with this one) the promotion. That is the slot for it.

edited to add, just after writing this I got another 14-15 losing spins in a row.
 
Just got 24 losing spins in a row :D.. So 50£ bonus collected so far. The bad thing is I am 50£ down at this point. So I am not really beating the bonus :lolup:
 
Run the simulation and never got over seven spins without a win, a win being anything above or below the stake (pretty obvious), for the record and perhaps to prove the science I did this over 100,000 spins through various browsers and various sites on free play.

I don’t have concrete prove that I did over 100,000 spins but then again I never counted the amount of beans and chips I consumed in the last year, the use of a cocktail stick to individually count the items and the subsequent entry into an excel spread sheet does not appeal.

Back on Earth (for me at least) I’d chance my arm in saying the promotion has more chance of paying out to a left handed lesbian dolphin in the artic sea who never even entered the promotion.

Disclaimer: left handed dolphins have as much chance if they enter the competition as right handed lesbian dolphins or even right-handed gay dolphins or left handed dolphins, perhaps I should stop digging the hole I started now.

Outdated URL (Invalid) :D
 
Looks like there was a slight loop hole to this promo - people obviously hammering these slots when they saw the 'potential' - but I wonder whether it really gives you that much of a better edge ??


From their updated t's and c's today -

"Play on all slot games except for Spinning Streak Games (Kingdom of the Titans, Rich Reel Devil and Riches of the Amazon) is eligible for this promotion."
 
Looks like there was a slight loop hole to this promo - people obviously hammering these slots when they saw the 'potential' - but I wonder whether it really gives you that much of a better edge ??


From their updated t's and c's today -

"Play on all slot games except for Spinning Streak Games (Kingdom of the Titans, Rich Reel Devil and Riches of the Amazon) is eligible for this promotion."

Hmmmm unless they're counting non-paying 'spinning streak' spins as being individual spins? I just automatically assumed that they'd consider each 'spinning streak' a single spin, same as they do for normal free spins......
 
For those interested the maths on this is actually super easy. To find out what the approximate odds are for any game, let me suggest the following procedure.

1. play 100 spins on a slot and count the number of spins with zero outcome.

2. plug that into the following formula :

Code:
  numberOfSpinsToPlayToGetSillyBonus = 1 / (( nr_of_zerospins / 100 ) ^ 20)

you can just paste it in google to find the outcome ..

so for example say I pick a game, do 100 spins in freeplay and find that it had 50 losing spins. (btw if you find less than 20 or more than 80 then take another sample)

the formula now is

1/((50/100)^20)

or when pasted into google : 1048576 spins.

For a high frequency event like any win vs zero you can get away with estimating it on a sample as small as 100 spins. (or you could adjust the
100 in the formula to be 200 or 300 if you want to improve the accuracy of your estimate).

Say you find a really high variance machine that has only 30 non-zero spins out of 100 spins, the number of spins you would have to spin on average before getting this bonus is
1/((70/100)^20) = 1253 spins ..

Cheers,

Enzo
 
Thanks Enzo :)

So basically we'd be looking at spending £250 for every £25 'bonus' (which itself has a 5xWR), assuming we can find a slot that only does 30 non-zero spins per 100 spins on average, and is played at the minimum 20p per spin.
 
Hmmmm unless they're counting non-paying 'spinning streak' spins as being individual spins? I just automatically assumed that they'd consider each 'spinning streak' a single spin, same as they do for normal free spins......

The thing with "spinning streak" or "sticky wins" slot is that you get much less 1-5xbet wins and much more 10xbet+ wins. You must have noticed this with jackhammer etc. 1 out of 5 winning spins will probably pay out alright.
When compered to normal slots, where you get a lots of "winning spins" that pay out 1xbet or less.

That is probably the reason they excluded those slots from the promotion.
I got 2-3 20 losing spins on a row yesterday. Although I lost 200£ so can not say I was actually beating the bonus :lolup:.
 
For those interested the maths on this is actually super easy. To find out what the approximate odds are for any game, let me suggest the following procedure.

1. play 100 spins on a slot and count the number of spins with zero outcome.

2. plug that into the following formula :

Code:
  numberOfSpinsToPlayToGetSillyBonus = 1 / (( nr_of_zerospins / 100 ) ^ 20)

you can just paste it in google to find the outcome ..

so for example say I pick a game, do 100 spins in freeplay and find that it had 50 losing spins. (btw if you find less than 20 or more than 80 then take another sample)

the formula now is

1/((50/100)^20)

or when pasted into google : 1048576 spins.

For a high frequency event like any win vs zero you can get away with estimating it on a sample as small as 100 spins. (or you could adjust the
100 in the formula to be 200 or 300 if you want to improve the accuracy of your estimate).

Say you find a really high variance machine that has only 30 non-zero spins out of 100 spins, the number of spins you would have to spin on average before getting this bonus is
1/((70/100)^20) = 1253 spins ..

Cheers,

Enzo

That's not quite how I would express the logic. So using your idea in your latter example you suggest an expectation of 1253 spins to hit 20 consecutive zero outcomes. This is akin to simplifying a bag of balls with 70 white ones (losing) and 30 red ones (winning) and asking me to pick 20 consecutive balls of white (of course replacing the white ball in the bag after each pick to imitate the way a slot picks a random outcome).
In other words 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10

Now see the likelihood. And that's assuming a slot which only has 30 non-zero results from 100.
 
That's not quite how I would express the logic. So using your idea in your latter example you suggest an expectation of 1253 spins to hit 20 consecutive zero outcomes. This is akin to simplifying a bag of balls with 70 white ones (losing) and 30 red ones (winning) and asking me to pick 20 consecutive balls of white (of course replacing the white ball in the bag after each pick to imitate the way a slot picks a random outcome).
In other words 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x 7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10x7/10

Now see the likelihood. And that's assuming a slot which only has 30 non-zero results from 100.

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So away from mathematical theory which often belies the real world:

I wasn't disputing the 1253/1 BTW although reading it back it sounds so, but wanting it demonstrated in a string for reasons explained in #2 below.

#1.The offer could be played at 1x20p spin which means that the player (using your logic) would get back £25 for every 250.60 spent, a 10% margin. Given as the RTP of the slots on JPP are 92-93% your site will now be operating at a loss of 2-3% of turnover as all players (unless stupid) would take up this offer as it's a no-lose chance. Even at 5x playthrough, a massive EV+ scenario, the site would lose cash. Pull the other one. I say......

#2. This is the slightly disingenuous side of the maths theory eh Enzo? ;)
In actual play. once the player hits a win the sequence starts again BUT those spins already taken and paid for are part of the player's sequence/continuity of spins. This is the result of something we both seem to agree on, that the values go back in the pot when picked. Therefore the player, in reality would go far in excess of 1253 spins.

But you know that already my friend. If you didn't, you'd have made a 'Betfair Happy Hour'-scale cock-up. And you're too clever for that. You can fool all the people some of the time, some of the people..........
 
Whilst I applaud the bravery of questioning Enzo's maths, I do have to question the sanity of it.




No offence dunover :D

You scorned the 'insurance' as much as I did don't forget.....:rolleyes:

The thing is, you and others, if you don't mind me saying so, have let Enzo 'lead' you.
He proposed (paraphrased) 'try 100 spins on a slot and discount the result if 20 or less or 80 or more'. To be fair he did admit that the results on a 50-50 slot would need over a MILLION spins to produce a 25 bonus.

Now, imagine if you or I played a mere 100 spins on any slot and then started bleating "crap slot" or "shit RTP" or "what? NO bonus round?". We'd have Nifty and the rest coming down on us like a ton of hot sh!t. The thing is, Enzo, unless he knows something he can't admit on here or he programmes them, cannot know exactly what percentage of a slot's spins produce a win of any description. Remember, they are random and need millions of plays to establish any meaningful figure (and TRTP) and to 'grab' a random group of 100 consecutive spins from this huge sequence is simply pointless.

Now the bag of balls. The odds are the same (0.7x) but would you prefer to be asked to pick 20 whites out of a bag of 100 containing 70 white, or a bag of 10,000 containing 7,000 white? (There is some Canadian mathematician who discussed and tried a similar proposition with some unexpected results if Enzo or anyone can recall his name, he also did work on lottery numbers at the start of a new lottery).

All the savvy people did exactly what I tried - picked a HV slot and played that. Like I said, if you crunch the figures this could potentially cost the casino a loss. But Enzo knows it won't...

Like I said in the OP, it's a very clever offer and respect to Enzo or whoever for coming up with it. One of those things that makes JPP unique. :cool:
 
Therefore the player, in reality would go far in excess of 1253 spins.

Some would, some wont and the average would be 1253 spins. There's no difference between theory and reality ..

Remember, they are random and need millions of plays to establish any meaningful figure (and TRTP) and to 'grab' a random group of 100 consecutive spins from this huge sequence is simply pointless.

Whether or not a sample size is pointless depends on the event you're trying to measure. Determining sample sizes is no exact science. A general rule of thumb is to take 30 times the frequency of the rarest event you're trying to gather stats on. For example .. if you want to verify something that you expect to happen 1 in 1000 times .. then 30.000 is a good rule-of-thumb sample size (assuming uniform normal distribution).

Since this particular event (zero-wins vs non zero-wins) typically sits around the 0.5 range it is one of the few things of a slot you can measure with a small sample size.

Now the bag of balls. The odds are the same (0.7x) but would you prefer to be asked to pick 20 whites out of a bag of 100 containing 70 white, or a bag of 10,000 containing 7,000 white? (There is some Canadian mathematician who discussed and tried a similar proposition with some unexpected results if Enzo or anyone can recall his name, he also did work on lottery numbers at the start of a new lottery).

Assuming the picked ball is put back each time that makes no difference at all. (it makes a difference if it wouldn't get put back.).

All the savvy people did exactly what I tried - picked a HV slot and played that. Like I said, if you crunch the figures this could potentially cost the casino a loss. But Enzo knows it won't...

Like I said in the OP, it's a very clever offer and respect to Enzo or whoever for coming up with it. One of those things that makes JPP unique. :cool:


Ok, please don't put words in my mouth. You also seem to be missing the obvious fact that I'm completely unrelated to JPP .. and quite honestly couldn't care less if they made an EV+ bonus or a really bad EV- one. My only interest in this discussion is the math - since they were so easy to do in this particular case I thought I'd chime in and show how to get a feel for what to expect. If you read my post again you might notice that I've picked my samples simply at the extreme ends of the spectrum. My post was intended to explain .. not to convince anyone of anything.

It's curious how you repeatedly describe what I call a math explanation as leading people on. Formulas have no opinions. Maybe I should leave my garden of reason and put on a tin-foil hat to avoid leading people on ..
 
Some would, some wont and the average would be 1253 spins. There's no difference between theory and reality ..



Whether or not a sample size is pointless depends on the event you're trying to measure. Determining sample sizes is no exact science. A general rule of thumb is to take 30 times the frequency of the rarest event you're trying to gather stats on. For example .. if you want to verify something that you expect to happen 1 in 1000 times .. then 30.000 is a good rule-of-thumb sample size (assuming uniform normal distribution).

Since this particular event (zero-wins vs non zero-wins) typically sits around the 0.5 range it is one of the few things of a slot you can measure with a small sample size.



Assuming the picked ball is put back each time that makes no difference at all. (it makes a difference if it wouldn't get put back.).




Ok, please don't put words in my mouth. You also seem to be missing the obvious fact that I'm completely unrelated to JPP .. and quite honestly couldn't care less if they made an EV+ bonus or a really bad EV- one. My only interest in this discussion is the math - since they were so easy to do in this particular case I thought I'd chime in and show how to get a feel for what to expect. If you read my post again you might notice that I've picked my samples simply at the extreme ends of the spectrum. My post was intended to explain .. not to convince anyone of anything.

It's curious how you repeatedly describe what I call a math explanation as leading people on. Formulas have no opinions. Maybe I should leave my garden of reason and put on a tin-foil hat to avoid leading people on ..

On the fact you don't rep JPP sorry my bad. I am merely pointing out a simple formula (which indeed it is) is not representative of the vagaries of random slots with numerous win ranges and features. It's almost like trying to write a summary of 20 different novels with one paragraph. Plus even the highest variance slots which are natural choices for a promo such as this have value pools which include a very large and thus frequent amount of small (< 1x stake) wins. The model we looked at has a simple (win=any)/(0) assumption. I don't feel there is any need for 'tin foil' references because somebody questions a simplification which when overlaid with years of slot play and untold amounts of spins on many different slots bears little relation to the outcome most will experience.

I say follow the money. If JPP had crunched info/report data they had on the various WMS slots and come to the conclusion that some games would effectively end up paying >100% to savvy players then the 'insurance' wouldn't be offered, especially without limits. That's my 'garden of reason'.....
 
On the fact you don't rep JPP sorry my bad. I am merely pointing out a simple formula (which indeed it is) is not representative of the vagaries of random slots with numerous win ranges and features. It's almost like trying to write a summary of 20 different novels with one paragraph. Plus even the highest variance slots which are natural choices for a promo such as this have value pools which include a very large and thus frequent amount of small (< 1x stake) wins. The model we looked at has a simple (win=any)/(0) assumption. I don't feel there is any need for 'tin foil' references because somebody questions a simplification which when overlaid with years of slot play and untold amounts of spins on many different slots bears little relation to the outcome most will experience.

I say follow the money. If JPP had crunched info/report data they had on the various WMS slots and come to the conclusion that some games would effectively end up paying >100% to savvy players then the 'insurance' wouldn't be offered, especially without limits. That's my 'garden of reason'.....

Ok dunover, I'm going to follow up on this one last time just to try and help out. First off, there is no simplification going on. We're looking at the actual win frequency which just happens to be a number that is quite easy to reliably approximate on a small sample. So lets assume we find a 0.3 win frequency slot. My mathematical estimate of 1253 spins to see 20 consecutive zero spins is the best possible estimate. It's the estimate that will be correct the largest number of times. If you base your estimate on experience rather than math - and its not 1253 - then its going to be wrong more often. If a thousand people play that 0.3 WF slot untill they hit 20 consecutive losses and write down the number of spins it took them then 1253 is going to be the number that gets written down most often.

There's no such thing as experience on random. It's random. Past events do not influence future ones so it doesn't matter how many past events you saw. They still don't influence future ones. And on your second point, +EV bonuses (intentional and not intentional) definitely do exist. In fact I give those out all the time to our own regulars. So I'm afraid you can't start from the assumption that a bonus can't be EV and hence my math can't be the best possible representation of the real world - its simply a wrong assumption - and if someone tells you hey I got a slot here with a 3/10 win frequency .. whats the number of spins I'll need - in your experience - to hit 20 consecutive zero spins - then I'd definitely say 1253 ;)

Don't shoot the math guy - I'm just trying to help :thumbsup:

Enzo
 
Ok dunover, I'm going to follow up on this one last time just to try and help out. First off, there is no simplification going on. We're looking at the actual win frequency which just happens to be a number that is quite easy to reliably approximate on a small sample. So lets assume we find a 0.3 win frequency slot. My mathematical estimate of 1253 spins to see 20 consecutive zero spins is the best possible estimate. It's the estimate that will be correct the largest number of times. If you base your estimate on experience rather than math - and its not 1253 - then its going to be wrong more often. If a thousand people play that 0.3 WF slot untill they hit 20 consecutive losses and write down the number of spins it took them then 1253 is going to be the number that gets written down most often.

I'd happily bet you it isn't - that, based on your model. would be the average number of spins needed.

There's no such thing as experience on random. It's random. Past events do not influence future ones so it doesn't matter how many past events you saw. They still don't influence future ones. And on your second point, +EV bonuses (intentional and not intentional) definitely do exist. In fact I give those out all the time to our own regulars. So I'm afraid you can't start from the assumption that a bonus can't be EV and hence my math can't be the best possible representation of the real world - its simply a wrong assumption - and if someone tells you hey I got a slot here with a 3/10 win frequency .. whats the number of spins I'll need - in your experience - to hit 20 consecutive zero spins - then I'd definitely say 1253 ;)



Don't shoot the math guy - I'm just trying to help :thumbsup:

Enzo

Appreciated but that's what I said if you think about it, the slots being random and the past performance not affecting future outcomes therefore any 'average' or sample figure produced from 100 spins is meaningless in context of the insurance offer. As for EV+ boni of course I know they are out there but always previously in the form of a fixed sum/percentage, that's all Chopley ever goes on about!

But that was not my point, which was that IF the insurance offer on certain slots was av1253 spins and it is unlimited, then you would have an indefinite EV+ bonus (for as many 20p spins as you could do in a week) which could potentially be costly for JPP. Whether JPP are aware or not as you say I couldn't care less.

As for second bold quote in your reply about 'cannot be experience on random' well I find that ironic considering you suggested playing 100 rounds on a random game to establish a figure between 20-80 to base the maths on. So based on your logic we can never get a precise figure to perform the calculation on, yes? I see the dilemma though, because we need somewhere to start, after all. It is also worth pointing out that despite 'no experience in random' we have all accepted Jufo and kktmd's data on various slots based on previous experience of hundreds of thousands of spins which have produced 'facts' for example 'I'R gives a bonus round about every 124 spins' etc. etc.

It is my belief that JPP have obviously got massive stored data on the historical games played on their site, and somebody has run an enquiry or search for information regarding 'gaps' between any wins, and their offer has been based upon the results they got back. I know your 30/100 was an example but I think it would be rather more than 30 for them to run this 'insurance' promo. Therefore their offer has been based on exactly that - 'experience of random'.

P.S. I know I'm debating on the hallowed ground trodden by an accredited rep, but it's not sacrosanct - I'm just a person who doesn't take all I'm told at face value and unquestioningly when I think I see a flaw or contradiction to debate. :)
 
Appreciated but that's what I said if you think about it, the slots being random and the past performance not affecting future outcomes therefore any 'average' or sample figure produced from 100 spins is meaningless in context of the insurance offer.

dunover said:
As for second bold quote in your reply about 'cannot be experience on random' well I find that ironic considering you suggested playing 100 rounds on a random game to establish a figure between 20-80 to base the maths on. So based on your logic we can never get a precise figure to perform the calculation on, yes? I see the dilemma though, because we need somewhere to start, after all. It is also worth pointing out that despite 'no experience in random' we have all accepted Jufo and kktmd's data on various slots based on previous experience of hundreds of thousands of spins which have produced 'facts' for example 'I'R gives a bonus round about every 124 spins' etc. etc.

P.S. I know I'm debating on the hallowed ground trodden by an accredited rep, but it's not sacrosanct - I'm just a person who doesn't take all I'm told at face value and unquestioningly when I think I see a flaw or contradiction to debate. :)

I think we're confusing the terms 'measuring' and 'experience' here. If you mean measuring when you say experience - then you're absolutely right. Measuring is absolutely a valid way to assess behavior. Personally my interpretation of experience is more that of a conclusion drawn on past events - I don't use that term to describe a conclusion made with formulas and measurements. Measurements are definitely a useful tool here .. especially if you have prior knowledge about what you are measuring. For example in this case we know its a slot game so we know the outcomes follow a uniform random distribution. One of the properties of such a distribution is that any subset of it is also a uniform random distribution. Because of that we know that the division between zero and non zero spins is a uniform random distribution.

From those distributions we know that if they have frequent events like a 1/2 or a 1/3 or a 1/4 event that is uniformly distributed, they can be reasonably measured on a sample sizes as small as 60, 90 or 120 samples. So 100 samples really is a pretty good sample (I btw suggested 200 or 300 to improve accuracy) to asses the win/lose frequency of a slot. If you were to assess the RTP it would be hugely insufficient since very rare events still constitute large amounts of the payout so you'd need to adjust your sample size to reliably include those rare events to.

I made a quick simulation that did 100 'spins' with a uniform distributed random 0.7 odd on zero : here's the outcome on how many of those 100 spins were zero

71,70,67,72,68,74,70,69,63,74,

error : 1,0,3,2,2,4,0,1,3,4
average error : (1+0+3+2+2+4+0+1+3+4)/10 = 2

as you can see, two samples are 4 off and the average error is 2 .. but in general I think its quite clear that 100 spins is enough to get a ballpark figure .. of course more is always better but for these types of events that stabilizes really fast .. you should expect to be only a couple off for these types of odds and samples of 100 spins.

Cheers,

Enzo
 
The only thing I can see from a player's perspective is the casino can sit and work out the math and know whether or not they're going to go broke with this offer because they're counting on a very large sample. I'm sure that number 20 wasn't picked out of a hat. It's obviously possible to hit 20 zeros in a row but if they've done their math correctly they might end up paying a few (un)lucky players quite early, some will never see the bonus and the rest will probably average out to a % bonus they probably would have offered anyway.

From a player's perspective it's no different than playing a slot game and trying to win. (I mean seriously, who sits around hoping the lose 20 times in a row?) Random is still random and if one player sits down with his deposit he could conceivably pull this off in his first 30 spins OR he could sit here spinning until the cows come home and never see 20 consecutive zeros.

If we simply followed the math when we gambled there would be no point in playing. Pick any game you like, the math says you're going to lose.

The only difference in this bonus and any other is the psychological head game it plays with people trying to achieve it. I'm not sure if I want to be getting excited after 15 or 16 losing spins and then feel let down because I finally managed to win something. The worse your game play the more you'll want to keep trying.

"I hit nothing 18 times. I was so close! I want to try again." :D

"19 losing spins! CRAP! I hit a free spin bonus sonofabitch!" :mad:
 
The only thing I can see from a player's perspective is the casino can sit and work out the math and know whether or not they're going to go broke with this offer because they're counting on a very large sample. I'm sure that number 20 wasn't picked out of a hat. It's obviously possible to hit 20 zeros in a row but if they've done their math correctly they might end up paying a few (un)lucky players quite early, some will never see the bonus and the rest will probably average out to a % bonus they probably would have offered anyway.

From a player's perspective it's no different than playing a slot game and trying to win. (I mean seriously, who sits around hoping the lose 20 times in a row?) Random is still random and if one player sits down with his deposit he could conceivably pull this off in his first 30 spins OR he could sit here spinning until the cows come home and never see 20 consecutive zeros.

If we simply followed the math when we gambled there would be no point in playing. Pick any game you like, the math says you're going to lose.

The only difference in this bonus and any other is the psychological head game it plays with people trying to achieve it. I'm not sure if I want to be getting excited after 15 or 16 losing spins and then feel let down because I finally managed to win something. The worse your game play the more you'll want to keep trying.

"I hit nothing 18 times. I was so close! I want to try again." :D

"19 losing spins! CRAP! I hit a free spin bonus sonofabitch!" :mad:

Yes, that what I suggested, as to do otherwise could end up being a bad strategy for JPP.
 
I think we're confusing the terms 'measuring' and 'experience' here. If you mean measuring when you say experience - then you're absolutely right. Measuring is absolutely a valid way to assess behavior. Personally my interpretation of experience is more that of a conclusion drawn on past events - I don't use that term to describe a conclusion made with formulas and measurements. Measurements are definitely a useful tool here .. especially if you have prior knowledge about what you are measuring. For example in this case we know its a slot game so we know the outcomes follow a uniform random distribution. One of the properties of such a distribution is that any subset of it is also a uniform random distribution. Because of that we know that the division between zero and non zero spins is a uniform random distribution.

From those distributions we know that if they have frequent events like a 1/2 or a 1/3 or a 1/4 event that is uniformly distributed, they can be reasonably measured on a sample sizes as small as 60, 90 or 120 samples. So 100 samples really is a pretty good sample (I btw suggested 200 or 300 to improve accuracy) to asses the win/lose frequency of a slot. If you were to assess the RTP it would be hugely insufficient since very rare events still constitute large amounts of the payout so you'd need to adjust your sample size to reliably include those rare events to.

I made a quick simulation that did 100 'spins' with a uniform distributed random 0.7 odd on zero : here's the outcome on how many of those 100 spins were zero

71,70,67,72,68,74,70,69,63,74,

error : 1,0,3,2,2,4,0,1,3,4
average error : (1+0+3+2+2+4+0+1+3+4)/10 = 2

as you can see, two samples are 4 off and the average error is 2 .. but in general I think its quite clear that 100 spins is enough to get a ballpark figure .. of course more is always better but for these types of events that stabilizes really fast .. you should expect to be only a couple off for these types of odds and samples of 100 spins.

Cheers,

Enzo

Yes, that's what I was proposing, glad that one's cleared up!
Of course we would see a different percentage dependant on which slot we tried it on. If the (eg. 95%) TRTP of a game consists of a pool of 10 million outcomes and 9 million paid 0.5 credits (you've played TSII lol..) 500k paid 10 credits and 500k paid zero it would be pretty darn hard to even come close to 20 losing spins. It's obviously past data like this they've analysed somewhere along the line.

From what I've heard of 3dice's games Enzo, this insurance promo would kill you....:D
 
thats very naughty to change terms in promo , border line rogue lines !!! caution here

They just put some restricted slots on and limited the maximum bonus - they could have pulled the whole promotion but didn't. Ladbrokes have done that before. I am sure they honoured those who had already played that day.

Jackpot Party are trying a ton of new promotions. Now that they have WMS competition they are getting innovative.

I really don't think they are behaving like a Rogue.
 
well, not really, not if they list the new terms in the
t and cs
generally, in any promotion, there's the line ' the casino reserves the right to change the terms or cancel a promotion as deemed fit' or such such...as long as it isnt mid-way after you agreed and signed up and are playing the promo, where theres then possible issues, if in general, they opt to alter the terms, it's their prerogative
 
They just put some restricted slots on and limited the maximum bonus - they could have pulled the whole promotion but didn't. Ladbrokes have done that before. I am sure they honoured those who had already played that day.

Jackpot Party are trying a ton of new promotions. Now that they have WMS competition they are getting innovative.

I really don't think they are behaving like a Rogue.

sorry i dont agree , its border line rougish to me as a player if i signed up for that promo & had been playing it had a few wins then started to see things changing along those lines i wouldnt be to happy

heres a promo for you a chance to win 5k im going to keep changing this promo to what is fit on my side , so i can change it twice within a few days because clearly im losing money )
not good in any shape or form from a accredited casino
 
It's definitely not rogue. The promotion is unique and innovative, therefore JPP are on a learning curve on this. They have obviously analysed the data thus far and the promo is unsustainable, so they have retained it but with some stipulations added. These are in the terms, therefore no foul.
(I did say this could happen earlier in the thread, that anyone savvy would play HV slots and effectively get an RTP of 100%+ on some). Therefore some slots excluded, and to stop autoplaying 20p and building up £25 hits the limit of £150 has been imposed. Well I did tell 'em........
At worst they are guilty of looking amateurish, but as a casino you couldn't get further from rogue. Ask Chopley whose little Chopley has a cot-bed with a montage of JPP screenshots on the quilt cover. :)

Having rewritten NetBet's (not to be confused with other casinos of similar name) terms for them, I should have offered my service to JPP 2 days ago. :D:D
 
It is so not rogue. They very clearly stated the terms have changed with the message board.

Only thing I am not happy, is that my Insurance bonus has not still been paid. It should have been paid yesteday, but still has not shown. "Technical problems".. Sucks!
 
Ahh, the old "Technical problems" excuse.

I've been having "technical problems" since I stopped getting enough fiber. Still, I have nobody to blame but myself.
 

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