It is an interesting idea, though I'm convinced the game provider studies do not gamble 😀.
The people in the industry, and especially game programmers, know how random number generators and RTP work. And here comes the more interesting part for me.
Are you familiar with game volatility? I'm asking because if you combine the wrong volatility game with the wrong bet value, we may have an explanation.
Consider it a bit more, please:
you need to pay attention, because some game providers allow casinos to decrease the RTP on their slots, so it can happen to you, that the same slot can have different RTP in 2 different casinos. Anyway, good casinos always show you how much is the RTP on a specific game
there are high volatility and low volatility games, when you play low volatility games, you win quite often, but the winnings are often lower than your bets. When you play high volatility games (for example jackpot games are often high volatility games), you can have a dead spin after a dead spin, maybe 50 in a row, but then you enter a special bonus feature and win a big part of your losses back. Anyway, if you stop playing earlier, you feel like the slot didn't pay you anything.
Let me know what you think about it.
But make sure to keep us posted. I look forward to seeing the official response to your concern.
Edited by author 8 months ago
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