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2021年12月7日 (火) 17:54時点における最新版

History of Slots

Slots are among the most widely used types of gambling on the planet. In many casinos in Vegas for instance, slot machines make up around 70% of their total income. Progressive-jackpot prizes alone including cars and million dollar prizes also means they are one of the greatest attractions for patrons at the casinos.

When Were Slot Machines Invented?

The very first slot machine game was invented in 1887 by Charles Fey in Bay area, California. Like many inventions, it had been created as a way of creating a gambling machine for poker that was able to make automatic payouts. Because machine poker at the time contained a never-ending listing of hands (e.g. full house, flush, two pair, straight) it had been impossible to produce automatic payouts.

In 1887 however, Fey invented a modern day machine which was much more simplistic in design. Rather than pay out money for every hand that a patron was dealt, it used 3 spinning reels each with 5 symbols to ensure that when specific symbols aligned on the pay line the jackpot was paid out. The tranquility of in addition to the higher prizes of slot machines made them ever more popular in the US and beyond.

The very first slot gambling machine that Fey invented, referred to as "Liberty Bell", paid 10 nickels when players won three liberty bells consecutively. It was the top prize on the machine.

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Because the classic 3-reel games became popular, other manufacturers began creating their own versions.In 1907, Herbert Mils in Chicago produced one called "Operator Bell". Many of these were soon install in saloons, bars, bowling alleys and stores across the US. In 1891, Sittman and Pitt produced a slot machine game which contained 5 drums with a total of fifty card faces. It was according to poker (i.e. slot poker) together with proved very popular.

Present day Slot Machines

The biggest trouble with traditional, mechanised slot machines could be that the payouts were limited because of how easily the prizes could be one. On the classic 3-reel machine with 10 symbols on each reel, for instance, the odds of winning the very best prize was 1/1000. This strictly limited the jackpot prize given that they would be won too often by players.

This problem was overcome in 1963 however when the first fully electromechanical machine called "Money Honey" was made. In the future, the machines could include "weighted symbols" and special microprocessors which limited how frequently winning symbols would align around the pay line. This reduced the prospect of winning pay lines and allowed the vendors and casinos to massively increase the jackpots while increasing their profits.