Online casinos are popular worldwide. Online casinos can’t be compared to real-life casinos when it comes down to simulation. For example, take Craps. Casinos use a random number generator to determine which number rolls. How random is that random? Every person at a casino has a different rolling pattern. Some roll the dice in a stack and throw them into the air. Others shake them and rocket them to a back wall. Other players often launch the dice from the table or land short of the backwall. Even some players will change their rolling pattern after each roll or point vworld agent.
Online casinos cannot simulate this. Although they can manipulate the random numbers generator, it is still impossible to simulate table action accurately. As a programmer, I know that a random generator is not always random. Worse yet, if the computer just “picks” a number, it is not even a proper set-up to be with. Let’s look at Craps. Is the casino using a random generator to pick a number between 1 and 12? If so, the random number generator simply picks a number between one and twelve. This would be against true probability. They could list all possible combinations and then let the computer pick one. Although it would be more accurate probability wise, it still lacks the randomness that live action provides. It is more likely that strange events will occur.
The truth is that it happens more often than one might think. One tester was playing at an online casino (Craps), to track the number of field numbers. In just 150 rolls the computer rolled 11 non field numbers consecutively, and then repeated the process a few rolls later with 12 non-field number. What’s the big deal? The field has a 44.5% probability of winning every roll. And second, the probability that 11 non-field rolls will be thrown in a row (.0015%). There is a chance that 12 non-field numbers will be thrown in a row. These events should occur one time every 667 rolls and one time every 1176 roll respectively. Both of these events can be seen within a few rolls from the other, within the 150 rolls being monitored.
But there’s more. A six was only thrown once for each of the 150 rolls. 13.5% of a six being thrown 13 times (9% for 16 rolls) – this happened 5 times in 150 rolls. The same thing happened with the eight, in fact there were two instances when an eight wasn’t thrown for 18-20. It is possible for this to happen five times out of ten.
You can see the extent to which random number generators fail to simulate real casino action when you add them all together. I don’t want to scare anyone away from gambling. Online casinos are a great way to make money and have some fun. But you must remember that this is a new environment with different rules. Because this is a completely different environment with different rules, you shouldn’t chase bets and assume they will come in. You might not use the same strategies you use in an actual casino.