Do you know how they work?
Mele is the only manufacturer inside Pennsylvania. According to law manufacturers of these machines spend a fee $400,000 in order to receive manufacturer status!
Mele then leases the machines to licensed vendors! The agreement is $10,000 for (X) amount of play. Once thst much play is used up the machine says (out of plays) and the vendor must pay Mele another $10,000 for more play!
This means the player is paying for the profits for the owner of the establishment, the vendor and Mele!
Now I am only referring to the PA skills machines with Living large, Perrywinkle, Grave yard gold ect ect! I’m not referring to the other taller machines with the various other games!
Vendors are required by Mele to keep the software up to date on their machines of they will not operate!
This puts Mele in control of everything in regards to how the machine plays!
Clicking View Next screen by no means changes how the game plays or adds skill to the game!
Sure sure you can go and check every puzzle on every bet level on every game and ONLY play when someone left something good. However that’s not realistic and is by no means skill!
Or you can copy the patterns and win Penny’s which takes a ridiculous amount of time and is impossible to win more then maybe a dollar or two!
Mele is also trying to claim only their machines are skill games and no other games are!
Regardless what games they are, there’s little to no skill involved and no one can win every time!!
Let’s do some math. The jackpots start at $1000 or $2,000. It’s shown in Penny’s! So100,000 or 200,000. The main progressive jackpot increases by 2 cents for every 4 of play!
Let’s say the jackpot is $4000. Meaning the jackpot has increased by 200,000 Penny’s!
Meaning the machine goes thru $400,000 worth of play for that jackpot to reach $4,000 dollars! That’s 100,000 plays at $4 each increasing at 2 cents per play!
Let’s say the machines have several jackpot up over $3,000 or $4,000! That’s millions of dollars of play to reach those numbers!
Mele gets their $10,000 for every (x) amount of play, the vendor and Store owner split the rest of the profits!
Let’s take $400,000 and subtract 2k. $398,000. 90% of that is $358,200 leaving almost $40,000 for the vendor, Mele and store owners profits. We know Mele is taking $10,000 for (X) amount of play! I’ve seen places that get that much play in a week so let’s say 50k in play.
That’s $80,000 Mele takes in order for that machine to reach a $4,000 jackpot! Then the vendor and store owner need to make money. Figure they each make 5k a week on average per machine in a busy place! Let’s say it takes 12 weeks for the machine to reach $4,000 jackpot on one game! That’s $200,000 of the 400,000 the machine took in to reach that jackpot.
Now of course there are wins in-between. Winning a dollar or $4 or 40 or 500 or 2688 which is the max bonus payout!
Over all the machines are paying maybe 50% of what they take in.
Considering Mele takes 10k for every (X) amount of play and the vendor and store owner also need to make a cut, the machines at the very best are paying out(actual money cashed in) maybe 30%!
Meaning if you sat there and put $100,000 into a machine you would probably get around $30k back!
I don’t see where the skill is involved there!
What sq you pick has no outcome on what the next spin will be. It’s already pre-determined. It’s the same with the bonus spins. It’s predetermined how much your going to win. What you pick is irrelevant. It’s it’s meant to be a ×5 win or a ×100 win that’s what it will be!
]]>The skill games are proven games of skill.
The fact that people make a profit on a game of skill is based on low skill players playing the game.
Carnival games at a fair are games of skill, yet there’s noone decying the dime pitch, ring toss, etc.
These games of skill are literally proven to have a positive payout on every single play, if the player plays perfectly. The net payout would be time consuming, boring, etc. However that fact is not the point – skill can overcome all elements of chance and it is not overbearing.
You can get addicted to the dime toss and ring toss, and you have no control over the wind speed when you toss. These arguments are farcical. And not everyone has the motor skill to make carnival games anything more than a game of chance.
Regulation makes sense, but banning does not.
]]>The only way to regulate these machines is by forcing all licensed vendors and owners of this machines to turn in their numbers. Money in, money bet, money cashed out!
There’s also ways to make the machines not play how their intended! Capping jackpots often causes machines to not hit them as regularly.
They say these machines pay out 90% but the reality is some pay as little as 50-60%!
If you’re going to regulate them they must be set to a minimum pay out percentage! Say 85%. Anyone caught setting their machines lower get charged with theft by deception as they are advertising on the machines these max payouts and jackpots can hit. While in reality they don’t hit! I’ve seen machines take in over 100,000 and never hit a $2500 jackpot!
Touching the screen isn’t a skill. Understanding a machine set to pay out 90% will hit when the numbers reach a certain point is a skill. The problem is that can be done with any video slot regardless if you’re required to tap the winning line or not.
If anything having to tap the winning line gives the house a larger advantage as there’s no directions on how to play the machines and it’s very possible for someone to get distracted and miss a $400-$progressive jackpot. Maybe they hit the button and their phone rings and they must answer it. Next thing they know there’s 2 diamonds in a row and it timed out!
The fact that type physical reaction time discriminates against those with physical disabilities also violates the disabilities act of 1996. As it’s not fair for all individuals! As not all individuals have the cognitive abilities and physical abilities to accomplish such a task!
You’re casino attorneys need someone like my self who knows exactly how to defeat these judges rulings lmao.
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