
Offline slots are the same machines that are in real casinos, slot machine halls, bars, sometimes even in airports and hotels. The same ones with physical buttons, levers and sometimes very cheerful flickering lights.
How they work:
Technically, there is a random number generator (RNG) inside, almost like online. But there is a caveat: the parameters of this generator can be adjusted much more harshly in favor of the casino.
What is the RTP:
In offline, the RTP is considered to be around 85%-92%. Sometimes a little more, if it is a really top casino like Las Vegas or Macau, where the competition for customers is high, and if it is some slot machine hall in a roadside hotel or a local casino without a name, be sure, there can easily be machines with an RTP of about 85% and below.
Pros of playing offline:
Online slots are the very games that you can enter through your computer or phone without getting up from the couch. In terms of technology, they work on the same principle of a random number generator (RNG), only the whole process goes through the provider's servers or casinos.
How it works:
Most normal online casinos don't make their own slots. They rent them from providers like Pragmatic Play, NetEnt, Play'n GO, Bgaming and others.
Let's be honest: most people don't bother with what RTP is at all. They spin slots at random, rejoice at winning, get angry at losing β and do not even suspect that the outcome of almost everything that happens on the screen is already embedded in the mechanics of the game itself.
What is RTP in simple words:
RTP (Return to Player) is not magic or a secret number for the elite. It is just an indicator of what percentage of all bets the slot theoretically returns to players in the long run. If the slot has an RTP of 96%, it means that at a distance of 1000β¬ made by bets, about 960β¬ will return to the winnings of the players. And only 40β¬ will be kept by the casino as a net profit.
And here lies the most important topic:
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