Post
Topic
Board Gambling discussion
Re: Draftking fined $19k for a player's $0 win after 20,000 spins on a slot game
by
South Park
on 09/09/2024, 19:55:59 UTC
A slot player in Connecticut was said to have decided to play a new slot game that appeared on Draftking casino late August (Last month), but how ever, it was an really ugly experience after the player was said to have clicked the spin button for several hundreds of times and didn't get any winning, soon enough, hundreds of spins turned into thousands of spins, yet no winning.

According to the news, 522 other players from Connecticut also played the same game and did not get any winning after several spins, the issue was reported to regulators, meanwhile draftking had already carried out their own investigations and discovered that a bug in the game code set the game odd to zero, and for this reason, no one can win, Draftking then refunded all the players who had played the game the money they spent for bets but without telling the players what actually was the cause of the lack of winning, the game was taken down, bug fixed and then was relaunched.

Meanwhile after Draftking has refunded player who were affected a total of $23,909, the state gamming regulators slammed a fine of $19,000 to Draftking and another $3,500 to the game provider.

snip

Meanwhile my personal question is, are slot games really provably fair? If odds can be set to zero, and no one be able to win, is it not possible that some casinos might be using this means or method to cheat slot players off their hard earned money?
Without a doubt it is possible for this to happen, however if we are talking about a regulated casino which engaged in such an illegal practice, you can be sure the fine they will have to pay will be many times higher and they will lose all their reputation with that single scandal, so many casinos prefer to not take that route as whatever additional profits they may get this way are nothing compared to the money they will lose once such decision becomes known.