On the other hand, the average person who plays that machinemight be less skilled at the game, so their real payback/returncould be high enough and they might not hold near perfect playagainst you if the machine is a big earner for them.
--- On Mon, 12/24/12, mikeymic <mikeymic@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: mikeymic <mikeymic@yahoo.com>
Subject: [vpFREE] Re: Keno Draw Poker
To: vpFREE@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, December 24, 2012, 11:33 AM
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "Mickey" <mickeycrimm@...> wrote:
>
> In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "pyiddy" <pyiddy@> wrote:
> >
> > I suspect I know the answer to this but I will ask it anyway. Doesn't keno have a $1500 threshold for W2Gs? Video Poker and slots have a $1200 threshold. I assume that $1200 is the W2G threshold for this game. Or is it?
> >
> >
> Live Bingo has a $1500 threshold. Maybe live Keno does too. But the video games are technically slots so get ready for a W2-G if you jackpot a video keno game for $1200 or more.
And you might get better comps, cash back, mailers, etc. playing live Keno or bingo. That's an important part of your return. But my guess is that they "see" Keno Poker as a VP bet.
So another consideration not mentioned is that you are receiving reduced slot club incentives since Keno Poker will be noted in the system as "video poker" which rewards players at a substantially lower rate than when you play slots. Yet up to 40% of your bet (10 coins out of 25) is being devoted to a random slot-type outcome not dependant on your skilled VP play. I feel the slight bump in EV (if you even find Keno Poker in full-pay) would be more than offset by lost slot club points. Technically you might just be better off by simply playing the non-Keno version of the game while putting that 40% Keno portion of the bet instead into an adjacent slot machine.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Reply via web post | Reply to sender | Reply to group | Start a New Topic | Messages in this topic (8) |