![]() He claimed the machines have three phases, and what you do has little or no influence. So if you "could" pick numbers it would be possible for the machine to payout more that the factory settings would allow, or payout much less that the state would allow. His reasoning goes like this.state laws govern payback percentages. What he said was there was no point in playing patterns, which we love, or moving numbers, which we do because it is not truly a random number generator machine. He seemed to make sense, but we are not experts so anyone who can help please do. Then a guy, not trying to ruin our fun, did exactly that. Recently however, I and my wife got completely crushed. Usually I do ok-that means I lose, but get a lot of play. I love to play Keno 20 card is my favorite. However, the bingo or lotto result was, itself, determined by a fair RNG, and awarded to you (or the person on the next machine over) in the form of a win or loss on the game you're playing. You see this most often in Native American casinos. The video results you see are just for show. Some places offer Class II gaming, where the results of your slot spin or keno pick are actually determined by a bingo game or lottery being shared by all players on the machines (the house takes a portion of each pot, but you're not playing directly against the house). ![]() So I would say, if you're happy with the theoretical return on the game you're playing, and enjoy picking your patterns or methods, you should go right ahead and play with confidence in the fairness of the RNG used. (so overall you win more than 1 in 25 times) and partly because they need to make money on the game. That's going to be partly because they're paying other wins like 4 of 8, 5 of 8, etc. For illustration only (not real life), maybe 1 in every 25 cards, you should get 3 hits out of 8 numbers on average. They don't make money (over the long run) when you lose they make money by not paying you a full odds amount when you win. The odds that paytable pays are what determines the return. It's based on the long run, on millions of draws, sometimes billions. The return on any Keno game is theoretical. They tend to function as they are supposed to. The Random Number Generators (RNG) used in most games (including Keno) are required to be random to a certified (high) degree, and watched over by outside regulators. The UK has some machines that work like this, and there might be some crooked online casinos that do it, but not here. My non-math-guy take: While it's possible the guy you talked to is right, it's highly unlikely, and illegal in most US jurisdictions. Can anyone help? Please explain how a Keno machine works.are the numbers random or not. Yet I can't get around his point that truly random numbers would pay far below the state minimum over time based on the odds of hitting seven out of seven and the payout for doing so. It feels better than just pulling a handle hoping to get lucky-I think I am actually picking the right numbers the machine randomly generates. If true this would really stink, because I like Keno because I feel like I actually won by picking the right seven numbers based on what I see the machine doing. Phase 3-you will hit something big because the machine is below the state minimum and therefore will hit no matter how you play. Phase two-now it is truly random and you may win or lose based on your number selection, because the machine is neutral. Phase one-you will not win the machine will not allow a jackpot because it is at or above it's programed payout. ![]()
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