First off, I readily admit I can't do the math here, I'm just not that smart and am looking for help. If you want to troll me because of that, I can take it so mods be liberal, it really isn't a big deal if I get flamed here because a gambler probably should know such things.
Having said that I am looking for the math on some video poker. I don't play it, but I had an interesting conversation (at least to me) about which version is the least variance and what it would take to move up in player tier status at the local casino. Player points earned playing real poker don't count towards tier status.
Again, I don't know much about video poker but I'm assuming if one were trying to tier up it would be the least expensive way to do it because the percentage payback is much better on video poker here than it is regular slots. I know the pay schedule dictates the actual percentage payback, but it has to be higher than the 85% Pennsylvania allows on regular slots, right?
Also, this casino only give you 1 point per $2 played through on video poker as opposed to 1 for every $1 on regular slots.
Here are my questions:
- Which form of video poker is the lowest variance? Assume I am looking for max play through per $1000 put in the machine and this place offers pretty much all versions of video poker I have seen (normal, Ult X, 100 Play, etc...)
- If you need 25,000 points to tier up how much on average would it cost you?
- Am I right this would be less expensive than normal slots given you have to run twice as much through to acquire the same points?
So yea, I probably should be able to figure this out, but I probably should have finished high school as well. It is what it is.
Flame away, but maybe throw in a decent answer along the way as well!
Thanks