vpFREE2 Forums

Jackpot with Different Players Card

I have found much better bounce back opportunities available by
spreading my play out over multiple players cards belonging to non
gambling friends and relatives than accumulating it all on my own
card. I generate play on their cards and then when the e-coupons
arrive in the mail, they forward them to me and I cash the e-tickets
at the casino with no need for ID.

I just started using this technique, so I have yet to hit a jackpot on
a machine where I have been using a players card that is not in my
name. Would there be any ramifications if I hit a jackpot requiring a
hand play on a machine with the wrong card? Since they always want
positive photo ID anyway, I don't see this as a major risk, but I'm
not sure. Can they attempt to deny paying a jackpot? Should I remove
the foreign card before the attendant shows up and insert my own? Not
sure that would do much good anyway as I suspect the machine has ID'd
the card that was used when it hit. Perhaps that would raise more
suspicion. If I just leave the relatives or friend's card in the
machine, if the attendant notices and ask why the card in the machine
does match my ID should I just be straight up with them and tell them
I'm using a friend's card?

If anyone has any relevant experience in this area, please advise.

Thanks in advance!
SB

I recently had a conversation with a person who claimed to have been
backroomed for doing exactly what you are doing. It wasn't playing
on multiple cards so much as it was running the associated free play
from various cards that seemed to prompt the reaction from the
casino. This particular casino mails paper free play tickets, and I
think it was the process of running ticket after ticket through all
at one time and on the same machine that caught the attention of
security.

That being said, I play on my wife's card (and run the generated free
play) all the time, and have never had any problems so far. I do try
to be somewhat discreet about it, just in case someone is watching.

My experience with hitting jackpots on my wife's card is similar to
Bob Dancer's - i.e. it doesn't seem to cause problems. It may be
different if you hit a jackpot on a non-spouse's card - I don't
know. Probably nothing would happen the first time or two, but if
you did this regularly they might take action against you.

EE

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--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "spartanbuckeye21" <kobj21@...> wrote:

I have found much better bounce back opportunities available by
spreading my play out over multiple players cards belonging to non
gambling friends and relatives......

a machine where someone else left their card in and being soft, you
think it is yours. You hit a jackpot, you are playing the machine, not
some guy you left an hour ago.

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--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "spartanbuckeye21" <kobj21@...> wrote:

Would there be any ramifications if I hit a jackpot requiring a
hand play on a machine with the wrong card? Since they always want
positive photo ID anyway,

I do not see how they can deny you a jackpot. What if you sat down to

If the casino has a casino wide jackpot and you win on a card that
isn't yours, then the casino can refuse to pay you. I have heard a
couple of people losing this kind of jackpot at the Prairie Band
because it wasn't their card. They can't refuse to pay a jackpot that
the machine itself hit.

If it isn't husband/wife, it is probably fraud.

dipy911

I just started using this technique, so I have yet to hit a jackpot on
a machine where I have been using a players card that is not in my
name. Would there be any ramifications if I hit a jackpot requiring a
hand play on a machine with the wrong card? Since they always want
positive photo ID anyway, I don't see this as a major risk, but I'm
not sure. Can they attempt to deny paying a jackpot? Should I >

Thanks in advance!

···

--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "spartanbuckeye21" <kobj21@...> wrote:

SB