Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
All machines legal California: Machines 25 years or older legal Colorado: Machines before 1984 legal Connecticut: All machines prohibited Delaware: Machines 25 years or older legal Washington, D.C. Machines before 1952 legal Florida: Machines 20 years or older legal Georgia: Machines before 1950 legal Hawaii: All machines prohibited Idaho
In casinos which use coin in, coin out systems, a hand pay may be caused by a coin jam, inadequate supply of coins in the machine's hopper to pay the requested amount, or another problem with the coin out mechanism. A hand pay can also be triggered when the win is large enough that the number of coins required to pay out the win would be excessive.
A pay table is the name for the list of payouts on a slot machine or video poker machine. The table shows for each combination of symbols and the number of coins bet how many coins (or credits) the bettor will win. The pay table feature of the slot machine displays all possible winning sequences for that specific slot game.
The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board is a governmental agency of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, founded in 2004 as the state licensing and the regulatory agency responsible for overseeing slot machines and casino gambling in the state.
In certain jurisdictions, VLTs are known as video gaming devices (VGD) or video slot machines along with video gaming terminals (VGT). Most VLTs are multi-game devices, allowing the players to select, from an on-screen menu, the games they wish to play. They are also known as poker machines, video poker machines, and fruit machines in some areas.
The project's objective was to create jobs for the tribes' young people. The same day the state voted against the Indian casino project, Maine voters approved a plan to add slot machines to the state's harness racing tracks. [15] The National Indian Gaming Commission oversees Native American gaming for the federal government.
In an agreement negotiated with the state of Connecticut, to gain their approval of the casino, the tribe agreed to pay 25 percent of the slot revenue to the state, a sum that amounted to almost $200 million per year as of 2007. [8] In the fiscal year ending June 2008, Foxwoods' 6,300 slots handled more than $9.1 billion.
"Game rooms" throughout the state feature slot machine-like devices commonly called "eight-liners". The machines are legal if they offer only non-cash prizes valued at less than $5, [ 58 ] but law enforcement officials say that illegal cash payouts are near universal. [ 59 ]