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Can You "Throw Away" a Pick Em Royal?

"Wouldn't Nevada's current regulations on continuous shuffling until the redraw (to thwart computer whizzes from exploiting flaws in RNG's with pattern recognition techniques) apply to recent versions of Pick 'Em?"

Which Nevada regulation are you referring to? Can you provide a cite?

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"Wouldn't Nevada's current regulations on continuous shuffling until

the redraw (to thwart computer whizzes from exploiting flaws in RNG's
with pattern recognition techniques) apply to recent versions of
Pick 'Em?"

Which Nevada regulation are you referring to? Can you provide a cite?

I can not. This is what I have been lead to believe in various gaming
articles I have read of late. ( My memory may be inaccurate, but I
think Jean wrote about it in a recent Frugal Fridays article.)

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--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, kelso 1600 <kelso1600@...> wrote:

--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "vegasvpplayer" <vegasvpplayer@...>
wrote:

> "Wouldn't Nevada's current regulations on continuous shuffling

until

the redraw (to thwart computer whizzes from exploiting flaws in RNG's
with pattern recognition techniques) apply to recent versions of
Pick 'Em?"
>

Kelso politely pointed out to me in a private post that constant
shuffling may have been a decision by manufacturers and not a result of
Nevada regulation. If correct, maybe Bally's older game of Pick 'Em
still does not incorporate constant shuffling even in the newest
releases. I would guess that IGT's newer game of Pick-A-Pair probably
uses the constant shuffling technique, but this is just speculation on
my part.