Hi Gang:
Since there is a current thread about hot/cold machines, I figured I'd
jump in with our latest tale regarding the subject. Discounting a loss aboard
the Equinox on our recent cruise in the Mediterranean (yeah, we know,
pretty stupid!) Hedy and I have been on a major role lately in the casinos (this
past weekend we made it five straight winning trips) and our formula for
success has been more or less the same ... find a machine that is hitting
quads and then play it to death.
It started with our "Machine on Drugs" in New Orleans and has continued in
AC.
We start by playing 9/6 DDB at the dollar level and if we go through our
original $200 investment we move to another machine in the carousel. If
nothing happens at that machine, we move again. And continue to do so until we
make a hit or two. If a machine hits a number of quads, or hits a bonus
quad or two and we find our bankroll has gone over the $1,000 mark we
occasionally bump up our play to $2. We set a number and if we find our bankroll
dwindling considerably we go back to the dollar level.
Many times just one of us finds a machine that seems to be paying off, so
the other stops playing and watches. Then, we alternate playing that one
"good" machine.
We know that there is no logic to this at all. That this game is a
mathematically-based science that is all based on randomness and that there's no
difference if you play "one machine for 10 hours or 10 machines for one hour"
but right now this method of play has produced many thousands of dollars
in profit for us over the past two or three months.
This past weekend at Harrah's AC, for instance, we each had limited s
uccess on the first machines we tried on Friday, but Hedy switched and hit aces
for $800 right away on her second machine. I continued to have very little
success early but then hit a run of quads on the third machine I tried,
switched to the $2 level and hit aces for a $1,600 hand pay.
Unfortunately, it was all downhill after that and we finished Day One with
a small profit.
Day Two on Saturday was a different story. We both hit aces for $800 early
but mine disappeared pretty quickly and I was once again reduced to a
spectator as Hedy continued to whale away. She hit aces again, then put
together a string of $250 quads. She switched to the $2 level and banged out four
$500 quads.
She hit a dry spell over the next hour or two but then she held two aces
and up popped the other two and a four for a $2G hand pay! I took over her
machine after that and hit 4's for $400. So, that one machine hit aces three
times (once with a kicker) and a number of quads, including a couple of
bonus ones.
We came home with another sizable profit and a continuing belief that it's
all about "finding the right machine!"
Regards,
CoachVee & Hedy
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