18 responses

  1. Liz
    February 26, 2019

    People relying on casino win/loss statements are crazy, it usually says right on it that they are inaccurate. For the IRS, if you want to deduct losses, you have to keep your own gambling record. Keeping your own record is also a good idea so you can review it to see where your money went. Generally gamblers remember the wins and try to forget the losses and you might beat one casino but get beat by the other casinos you play at. Look at IRS topic 419 for details.

    Reply

    • papadynamite
      March 4, 2019

      I recently returned from my monthly stay at Harrah’s in Atlantic City and noticed that continuous shuffling machines are now in use at all blackjack tables at Caesar’s property including Bally’s, Caesars and Harrahs. Thus, the advantage of card counting has now been nullified. I knew that such machines were in use all over Southeast Asia in Macau. Malaysia and Singapore so I figured that it would ultimately happen in the USA. The card counters have been screwed!

      Reply

  2. Candy F Wright
    February 26, 2019

    I find casino win/loss statements to be accurate for machine play (slot or VP) when the players card is used, but dubious at best for table play (even with a card). I was audited specifically for the gambling winnings and loss entered on my return. It was a paper audit, only had to submit “evidence” by mail to support my figures. As was stated in the information contained in my “Dear Taxpayer” letter informing me of the audit, win/loss statements are (or were) one item of “evidence” accepted by the IRS. Other sources include (but not limited to) losing horse race tickets, losing keno tickets, and of course personally kept logs. When I was audited, all I had were my win/loss statements. These were accepted, case closed. True, w/l statements contain a disclaimer, as they cannot know all sources of gambling income and/or loss for any player. (And not like my winnings were a large amount, but I guess things were slow at the IRS that year…LOL). Or certainly if one does not believe the figures on the w/l, then one needs other evidence, such as with personal record keeping if they want the IRS to believe their own figures rather than those on the w/l.

    Question: Why would a personally composed log/record be considered more accurate than computerized records? I’ve always wondered that. I set out to keep my own records once, and found they would be grossly inaccurate since I would often forget to record starting times/ends of sessions, my “coin in and coin out”, etc. I’d have to concoct my own figures later from memory, which could hardly be considered accurate. Not to mention it was grossly disruptive to my enjoyment of games.

    DISCLAIMER: I don’t recommend anyone follow my tax reporting beliefs versus their own (though I have had experience in that department). Consult your CPA, or other official sources. Maybe the IRS has change their position from back when I was audited. Do your own research.

    Reply

    • Liz
      March 2, 2019

      Candy wrote: “I set out to keep my own records once … I’d have to concoct my own figures later from memory, which could hardly be considered accurate.”

      I don’t recommend forging records later from memory, there are ways to figure out that a log has been forged, that’s why the IRS uses them. Gambling taxes are difficult in the US (no gambling taxes in Canada), you have a choice, either fight the system (not recommended, good luck on that one) or comply with the regulations. Jean Scott’s updated book “Tax Help for Gamblers” is a good place to start. The tax laws have just recently changed, so you’ll want the updated edition, and the laws might very well change every year from now on, so you need to keep current.

      Reply

      • vp player
        March 3, 2019

        Liz wrote: “I don’t recommend forging records later from memory.”

        You cannot “forge” your own records. You can make them up or estimate them so they will not be accurate, but that is not forgery. I also do not believe the IRS can tell if your records are accurate or made up.

        Reply

      • Liz
        March 4, 2019

        It’s supposed to be a “contemporaneous log”. A log made up later from memory would be a forgery of a contemporaneous log.

        Reply

  3. Jerry
    February 26, 2019

    Yes I do keep records and my results are very close to the win/loss statements except that I keep track of free play that adds about 0.8%. I was unaware of the multiplier frequency but have noticed the frequency difference for various numbers. I started playing this game after the casino dropped all 100% games except one bank of quarter machines. I have also noticed that VPW has a different rhythm for multipliers than actual machines. My main question concerned the accuracy of the 99.256 rating. There are also 70-coin Double STP that would seem to have a better payback than 60-coin STP. Thank you for your comments.

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    • Bob Dancer
      February 27, 2019

      Yes DSTP returns more than STP for the same pay schedule, but a high proportion of that extra return is in the dealt royal where there is also a multiplier (i.e. every 650,000 x 15 hands = every 9.75 million hands). When this happens, you get 20x multiplier on every hand. For quarter 10play, this comes out to be $200,000 (on a $87.50 bet).

      You will probably NOT play anywhere near this many hands. You will probably NOT hit this jackpot., which accounts for 0.23% of the return. When you subtract out this once-in-several-playing-lifetimes jackpot, the two games are fairly similar in EV.

      Reply

      • Jerry
        February 27, 2019

        DSTP does at times boost the multiplier from 11x to 20x. I often play 10,000 hands per day and have for 20+ years. I have not had a dealt royal on these machines but I expect it will happen eventually. I wonder how the return percentage is calculated on these machines since the multiplier randomness is not explained so I can understand it.

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      • ALBERT Pearson
        March 1, 2019

        I come up with $17.50 per hand

        Reply

  4. Jerry
    February 27, 2019

    The value of DSTP is not the dealt royal. It is that the multiplier occurs twice as often. If the average multiplier for STP is worth 4/15 per hand, the average multiplier for DSTP is worth 4/7.5 per hand.

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  5. LC Larry
    February 27, 2019

    A member at Wizard of Vegas was lucky enough to find this pink elephant of a 20x dealt royal.

    https://youtu.be/BWjNuN9N6yY

    Reply

  6. Jerry
    February 28, 2019

    When you get a dealt royal with multiplier in STP, the multiplier can be 2,3,4,5,8 or 10.
    When you get a dealt royal with multiplier in DSTP, the multiplier can be any number from 2 to 20 except 17 or 19.
    Since the dealt royal is so rare, it seems that my results should be much less than 100%.

    Reply

    • LC Larry
      February 28, 2019

      When you get a dealt royal and is accompanied by a “deal” multiplier, it’s automatically 20x.

      Reply

      • Jerry
        March 1, 2019

        I did not know that. During the time I have played, I have had fewer royals than expected (22 vs. 30) but the payout was 10% higher than expected. This has led me to believe that the multiplier has a greater effect than advertised. My sessions have been 70% positive for a two-year period. After going through multiples of the normal royal term, I do not expect “luck” to be a factor.

        Reply

  7. Jerry
    March 1, 2019

    The VPW software for STP is not the same as common machine software in the casino where I play. For VPW multipliers, the system shows several multipliers, stops on one of them, and then jumps to a different multiplier. The jump is usually from a large multiplier to a smaller multiplier. It’s not always lower but seems like at least 75% of the time. The machine software also stops but does not make a jump.

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  8. Jerry
    March 2, 2019

    After reading comments about STP, I have recalculated the game return vs. 9/6 DDB without the dealt royal factor. My calculations show 98.418 for DDB and 98.798 for STP but there seem to be some serious rounding errors in the IGT data. The biggest one is that the multiplier occurs “roughly every 15 hands.” I need a more accurate number for the frequency of multiplier. Also, the .00002 frequency number for a royal does not contain enough significant digits to compute the value of a non-dealt royal. Thanks to Bob and others for helping me understand the value of this game.

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  9. Piedrahefe
    March 5, 2019

    In order to comply temporaneously, one must update their log by the minute, hour, or day. Per the earlier comment. That would mean the grinders would stop every 10 minutes, take off their IPhone ear pods, pause their audio book, and determine their win loss since the last time period. Thanks, sure, why not?

    Reply

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