Slot Machine Odds Vs Blackjack

2 votes (50%)
1 vote (25%)
1 vote (25%)
  1. Odds Of Winning Slot Machine
  2. Odds On Slot Machine
  3. Slot Machine Odds Vs Blackjack Odds

The odds vary depending on the game rules and the number of decks, but the odds of a dealer busting in blackjack are about 30%. What is the house edge in blackjack? The house edge in blackjack is the.

4 members have voted

wmtrecruiter
i'm curios to my odds and what everyone this of this
the casino is 5 minutes from me in Oklahoma
with slots i seem to be the unluckiest guy in the world. for over a year i've gone at least 1-2 times per week with no luck. i had one jackpot of $600 last fall but lost 5 times that over the last year. i can sit between 2 people and they are both ringing and hitting jackpots and nothing for me. this morning i went and played 10 spins on a $5 slot with no luck - a guy played it right after me and hit for $450 on first spin. Now i have a bad attitude about slots.
my problem is that Oklahoma requires an ante for the table games - 50 cents a hand for poker, blackjack, etc.
so what would be my best odds for spending time at the casino and hopefully with better odds than I've had? if my choices are 3 card poker (with ante), blackjack (with ante) or slots - where is my time and money best spent?
thanks for your suggestions
Dieter
What kind of slots? Class II, or Class III?
I've had some pretty decent luck on Class II slots.
If you can finagle a no-ante on the table games - either by betting large enough or using the players card, blackjack is the way to go. If you can't get around the ante, look for Class III video poker. If it's Class II, just find something amusing, and look for the gaggle of chain smoking old ladies who are playing forever without sticking more money in the machines - do what they're doing.
If you just keep losing, just quit playing.. unless you like losing.
wmtrecruiter
thanks for the info - how do i tell if they are class II or class III slots?
Dieter

thanks for the info - how do i tell if they are class II or class III slots?


If the sign on the front of the place says it's a Class II gaming facility, that's a good indicator that it's Class II.
If there's a bingo card and/or bingo ball animation, that's Class II.
If there's a sticker on the machine that says 'Prizes awarded based on Bingo results', that's Class II.
If the play button says 'Play/Daub', that's Class II.
If you have to double-tap the play button, that's Class II. (Once to play, once to daub.. often followed by a congratulatory message like 'You daubed in time!')
You can ask. (Try asking at the players club.)
Otherwise, it might be Class III.
Note that to the casual player, there's very little difference overall - In either case, you stick in money, you smack the button, you might get some money back. The difference is in how the win is determined. In Class III, it's you vs the machine's internal RNG. In Class II, it's you vs a few other players, with the winner(s) determined by a central RNG.
Slot machine odds vs blackjack gameSeriously.. sweet talk the old ladies. Figure out what they're doing, and do that. If they're able to play for hours on $5, you might be able to, too.
May the cards fall in your favor.
wmtrecruiter
great info - thanks Dieter
DRich

If the sign on the front of the place says it's a Class II gaming facility, that's a good indicator that it's Class II.
If there's a bingo card and/or bingo ball animation, that's Class II.
If there's a sticker on the machine that says 'Prizes awarded based on Bingo results', that's Class II.
If the play button says 'Play/Daub', that's Class II.
If you have to double-tap the play button, that's Class II. (Once to play, once to daub.. often followed by a congratulatory message like 'You daubed in time!')
You can ask. (Try asking at the players club.)
Otherwise, it might be Class III.
Note that to the casual player, there's very little difference overall - In either case, you stick in money, you smack the button, you might get some money back. The difference is in how the win is determined. In Class III, it's you vs the machine's internal RNG. In Class II, it's you vs a few other players, with the winner(s) determined by a central RNG.
Seriously.. sweet talk the old ladies. Figure out what they're doing, and do that. If they're able to play for hours on $5, you might be able to, too.


Great job Dieter, I have never seen it broken down that way for someone.
Living longer does not always infer +EV
texasplumr
I travel up to Winstar and Choctaw from time to time. I only play poker. I don't like the ante on table games and I don't play slots. I haven't even looked at their video poker either. They regulate themselves. That just seems like the fox watching the henhouse to me.
jml24
The biggest difference as far as I am concerned is that there is no way to provide real video poker with a Class II machine. I have heard of such machines that simulate video poker by 'correcting' your hold cards to achieve the predetermined payout. I have never seen such a machine in WA where I live (Class II only.) It doesn't sound very fun and very likely would have a much higher house advantage than traditional video poker with moderate to good pay tables.
As far as the poll is concerned, if those were my only options I think I would decline to gamble. I play -EV games so obviously I don't mind getting ripped off, but there is a limit beyond which I won't go.
DRich

The biggest difference as far as I am concerned is that there is no way to provide real video poker with a Class II machine.


I disagree. My business partner and I came up with a method for bingo based class II that would provide a 'real' video poker experience with the exact same paytables, paybacks, and probabilities. We even pitched it to the major manufacturers but with Class II slowly going away they didn't believe it was worth implementing (and paying for). The sad fact is that most people playing in that space don't know or care that it is different than traditional video poker. They are just gamblers and will get the same winning or losing experience either way.
Living longer does not always infer +EV
Dieter

Odds Of Winning Slot Machine

It doesn't sound very fun and very likely would have a much higher house advantage than traditional video poker with moderate to good pay tables.


That entirely depends on the bingo paytable.
As for the fun part.. there's no skill involved. You smack the button, and you win or lose. You can smack other buttons, but that has no effect on the game outcome - it's strictly part of the 'entertainment portion of the game'.
If the bingo paytable is structured to be comparable to card hand frequencies, your overall RTP should be very close to video poker with correct strategy. If the bingo paytable is structured otherwise.. well, it won't approximate the same RTP.
May the cards fall in your favor.
on

Blackjack and roulette are the 2 most popular table games in any casino. Both seem to offer bets that are more-or-less 50/50 shots. After all, if you beat the dealer in blackjack, you win the amount you bet. The same is true for the even-money bets at the roulette table.
But which game has better odds?

Blackjack or roulette?

How Do You Measure a Casino Game’s Odds?

“Odds” is a term that’s often used as a synonym for probability. This is true to an extent, but it’s more complicated than that.

You CAN express an event’s probability in odds format. Most people understand that if an event has 2 to 1 odds, that there are 2 ways to lose and a single way to win. It’s easy to convert that into 1/3 or 33.33%.

But you can also express the payout for a bet in terms of odds. That’s easily understood, too. If I tell you that you’re going to get paid at odds of 2 to 1 if you win, you understand that for every $1 you bet, you win $2 if you win.

And, if you’re betting on something with a probability of 2 to 1 and a payout of 2 to 1, in the long run you’ll break even.

That’s not how casino games work, though.

The casino guarantees itself a profit by paying off bets at odds that are lower than the odds of winning. The difference between those odds is the house edge, and it’s usually expressed as a percentage.

For Example:

If you’re playing a game where you blindly pick a marble from a bucket, and you win if you draw the red marble, you can easily calculate the odds of winning. All you need to know is how many marbles are red and how many marbles aren’t.

If you have 3 white marbles and a single red marble, your odds of winning that bet are 3 to 1. (You have 3 white marbles versus 1 red marble.) If that bet pays off at 2 to 1, what’s the house edge? Let’s say you bet $100 in a theoretically perfect set of 4 trials.

You’ll lose 3 times, at $100 each, for a total of $300 lost. You’ll win once, and you’ll get a profit of $200. Your net loss is $300 minus $200, or $100. You divide that by the number of bets (4) to get an average loss of $25.

This means that the house edge for this hypothetical game is 25%. Over the long run, you’ll expect to lose 25 cents for every dollar you bet on it.

Generally, casino games with a lower house edge are better than casino games with a higher house edge. But not always.

What Are the Odds of Winning in Blackjack?

Every casino game has a gimmick of sorts that gives the house its edge. In real money blackjack, the casino makes you play your hand out before they play their hand out. If you bust, you lose your bet immediately. Even if the dealer busts when it’s her turn to play, you’ve already lost – in a fair game, this would be considered a tie.

The probability of actually winning a blackjack hand – even if you play perfectly – is only 42%.

In a fair game, your probability would be 50%.

In spite of this, the house edge for the game is only about 0.5% if you play with perfect strategy.

Why is the house edge so low when the odds of winning a hand are so low?

It’s because once in a while you get a blackjack, or natural – a 2-card hand that totals 21. In that event, you get paid off at 3 to 2 odds.

You only get that hand about 5% of the time, though, but it’s enough to shave some of that massive house edge off the game.

What Are the Odds of Winning in Roulette?

In roulette, you have a wide variety of bets you can make, although most real money roulette players I know place even-money bets. An even-money bet in roulette is a bet on odd, or a bet on even. Alternatively, it could be a bet on red or a bet on black.

Since almost half the numbers on the wheel are red and almost half are black, it would seem like this is a fair bet. The same for even/odd.

The gimmick in this case is the inclusion on the wheel of 2 additional numbers which are neither even nor odds, neither red nor black.

The standard American roulette wheel has a green 0 and another green 00.

You have a total of 38 numbers on the wheel. 18 of them are red, 18 are black, and 2 of them are green.

So you don’t really have an even chance of winning by betting on red, or by betting on black. The probability is actually 47.37%.

It doesn’t take a math professor to figure out that winning a bet 47.37% when you’re getting paid even-money doesn’t turn out to be a break-even bet.

In fact, it results in the house having an edge of 5.26%.

How does that compare to the house edge of 0.5% in blackjack?

Poorly, obviously.

Bet $100 on a game with a 5.26% edge, and you’ll lose an average of $5.26 over the long run every time you place that bet.

Bet $100 on a game with a 0.5% edge, and you’ll lose an average of 50 cents over the long run every time you place the bet.

Here’s the question:

Would you rather lose $5.26 in that situation, or would you prefer to lose 50 cents?

The answer seems obvious, but there’s more to this little math problem than you might think.

The Concept of Average Hourly Losses in Casino Gambling

Casinos use a simple formula to estimate how profitable a game will be. They multiply the number of bets the average makes per hour by the average size of their bet. This gives them the average hourly action for the game.

When you multiply the average hourly action by the house edge, you get the expected loss per hour for the game.

The average blackjack player makes 100 bets per hour. (This varies based on how many other players are at the table, how fast the dealer is, and how fast the player makes decisions.)

If you assume a $5 bet per hand, the average hourly action for that player is $500.

With a house edge of 0.5%, that’s an expected loss per hour of $2.50.

The average roulette player makes 50 bets per hour, but this also varies based on how fast the croupier is and how many players are at the table.

If you assume a $5 per spin of the wheel, the average hourly action for that player is $250.

Odds On Slot Machine

With a house edge of 5.26% the average expected hourly loss for roulette is $13.15.

You’d expect the average loss to be 10 times as much because the house edge is 10 times higher.

But it’s not 10 times higher because the average hourly action is lower. It’s not so low as to make the games the same kind of deal.

Blackjack still has better odds than roulette even when you adjust for the slower pace of the game.

What About Different Roulette Variations?

Slot Machine Odds Vs Blackjack

Slot Machine Odds Vs Blackjack Odds

Of course, for my example, I used American roulette.

But you can also find roulette games – called “European” roulette – which only have a single 0 on the wheel.

This reduces the house edge to 2.7%.

The average hourly loss goes down to $6.75.

That’s still not comparable to the expected loss of $2.50 at the blackjack table, but it’s closer.

You find further variations, though. In some European roulette games, you have an option called “en prison.” This is only available on the even-money bets, and here’s how en prison works:

If you bet on black and the ball lands on red or green instead, you don’t lose your bet immediately. Vegas crest casino no deposit bonus codes march 2019. It goes into prison until the next bet. If it loses on the 2nd bet, you lose your bet. Otherwise, it’s returned to you with no winnings.

This cuts the house edge in half again, to 1.35%.

The average hourly loss drops in half, too – to $3.38.

That’s still a lot close to $2.50 than it was, but blackjack still has better odds.

What About Blackjack Rules Variations?

The hold percentage – the amount the casino actually makes on blackjack – is significantly higher than 0.5%. It’s closer to 2.5% — 4% at some casinos.

That’s because blackjack’s house edge assumes that you’re making the mathematically optimal decision on every hand.

If you don’t understand the basic strategy for blackjack, you might as well play roulette.

Also, some blackjack tables only pay off at 6 to 5 for a natural.

In that case, the casino adds more than 1.5% to its edge.

You should pass on 6/5 blackjack games, but if you play them, you might as well play roulette.

Also, keep in mind that roulette doesn’t require you to make good decisions to achieve that edge. You just risk your money and take your chances.

Conclusion

If you’re looking for the game with the better odds, blackjack is your game – not roulette.

This doesn’t mean you should never play roulette. You might have your own reasons for preferring roulette to blackjack.

It just means you should consider the difference in odds from one game to the other.

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