How To Pick The Right Slot Machines

Online Casinos for Price is Right Slots

If you play at the right online casino, you stand a chance of making big wins and triggering jackpot or bonus rounds. However, the wrong slot machine and poor winning strategy can make you run through your bankroll in no time. So, unless you have a bottomless bankroll, it pays to choose the right slot machine. Selecting the right slot machines and betting well can make the difference and increase your chances of a life changing slots win! Kate Church A staff writer at Planet 7, Kate Church is an avid reader, professional writer and lover of games. Watch this video and you’ll know how to choose the best Slots – the ones that pay out the most. And the ones that are ready to pay out NOW. More tips on how to pick a winning Slot machine here.

You can play Price is Right slots for real money at the following online casinos:

NOTE: Price is Right slots is not available online for real money in the US or Canada - to discover which slots you can play for cash, please see our Online Casinos Page.

Price is Right Slots Review

The Price is Right is now a huge brand in Vegas casinos, with quite a few versions now available to play in slot machine format. I have noticed that new versions appear all the time in Las Vegas, which is great because there is something new, to play

Here, we have a free version of one of the games you might not recognize from las Vegas, but it is still a really nice version to play!

This review, though, is about the Vegas version...

The slot itself is a basic five reel slot, with most normal features. However, the thing that really sets The Price is Right Slots apart from many other games in Vegas are the bonus games.

There are two types of bonus. The first are the ones you play on your own if you hit the bonus symbols to trigger it. These include classic games from the TV show, including Plinko. The Plinko game see your balls bouncing down the Plinko screen and into multiplier baskets. You then win based on where you ball landed.

Then there is the community bonus game. This is triggered at random and when one person wins every person playing wins. This bonus involves a spinning wheel a bit like wheel of fortune slots and really builds up the tension as you all play at the same time, cheering at the screen

Price is Right Slots in Vegas

If you are in a Vegas casino right now, you might well spot a new Price is Right Slot machine with Drew Carey. These are usually made up of a bank of four slots in a row and they feature community gaming features

The community gaming bit on the price is right slots is great fun and a great way to interact and enjoy playing with other players. It's great when you get to chat to other players when you all win the bonus feature at the same time.

Plinko Bonus

The game also has a Plinko bonus round, featuring the Plinko peg board. You will get the Plinko bonus triggered if you get Plinko symbols on reel 3, 4 and 5 of the slot. The Plinko pegboard is then revealed and the Plinko game begins. Those of you that remember the Plinko game will no doubt enjoy this game. Those that don't will be able to appreciate one of the games your grandparents loved!

Wheel Bonus and Showcase

The wheel bonus is initiated when you get the wheel symbol on reels 3, 4 and 5 of the slot. Once triggered you get to spin the wheel and you take bonus money amounting to the numbers you spin. After your first spin you may choose to stick or spin again in hope of getting more than 55, but less tan 100 (over 100 is bust) taking you through to the showcase round.

Showcase Round

If your spin total is over 55, but less than 100 you go through to the showcase bonus. Here you get to first choose a showcase, then you choose items from within the showcase to reveal bonus money. Keep picking items and accumulating money until you reveal the 'collect' item, when the game finishes and you take your reward.

fountainfiend
Hi all,
Long time lurker, but I had a question I haven't quite seen before, so decided to join up. I have always been a 'smart' gambler, playing mostly full-pay VP and Craps, with the occasional Blackjack, but have never played a slot machine until recently. We had an offer at a local casino for a few hundred in free play, so we went and the full pay video poker machines were full, but we wanted to see how much value we could extract from the offer and then take off. So, we decided to play a Double Diamond Wheel of Fortune machine, which actually turned out to be pretty lucrative, and ended up a few hundred dollars in real money walking out over the inital free play.
I am heading to Las Vegas next week, and I thought it might be fun to play a slot machine, but given that I don't have any idea of what the payback is on any of them, what is a 'smart' gambler to do? (Other than not play them at all, which I totally agree is the smartest move. Just something entertaining to try.). Any ideas on how to find the 'best' payback at a Strip casino? (Also realize, that the strip is going to be worse than most other places in LV.)
Thanks!
DeMango
I have that problem with a casino in Biloxi. Despite only playing table games, the offers they send me are ALWAYS slot free play. So I usually also do the double diamond thing at a level that gets me off my feet for 15 minutes or so. But as a smart gambler the only other sitdown is at a JOB machine. Again close to an even game to get a breather after a lengthy stand at a craps table.
Mission146
Check out any of the threads on the WMS Progressives or on Quick Hits. I have to get ready for work right now, but I'll link you to some tomorrow if you have not found them by then.
ewjones080
It's always been my understanding that the higher the denomination, the higher the payback. A penny slot might pay back 80% but a $5 slot might pay back at 99%. And whatever you play, best to play max credits.
There's lots of things I've heard that I suspect are myths, like slots near the door are looser/tighter, slots on the ends of banks are looser/tighter.. Don't know if there's anything to it.
Mission146

It's always been my understanding that the higher the denomination, the higher the payback. A penny slot might pay back 80% but a $5 slot might pay back at 99%. And whatever you play, best to play max credits.


1.) True enough about the high-denoms, but only a Progressive slot can have a return at 100+%, with some very few exceptions.Win
2.) I also recommend looking at the paytable. They are few, but some slot machines have what I term a, 'Perfectly graduated payout,' which simply means that there is no benefit to Max Betting. However, some machines require Max Bets for Bonus Games and other features (even if the payout is otherwise perfectly graduated), so make sure to look out for that.
The perfectly graduated payout machines with no penalty for not Max betting will typically be single-line, three-line or five-line machines with no frills.
Vultures can't be choosers.
onenickelmiracle
Since it's your first post, you should go play a flashy game at Venetian like Wizard of Oz.
Since you said long time lurker, really whatever you do go as big as you can denomination wise, but try to get 20-40 spins.
If you go too big, the chance of a total bomb is too great. Just diversify a bit to get some spins in, then quit, and don't feed if it doesn't work out. Be prepared for failure and play it first before you start losing money.
ThatDonGuy

It's always been my understanding that the higher the denomination, the higher the payback. A penny slot might pay back 80% but a $5 slot might pay back at 99%.


There seems to be one exception: dollar Megabucks machines don't pay back as much as other dollar machines. (At least, that's the impression I get from the statewide data, which I may be reading wrong.)
Otherwise, there's an explanation: in order for the casino to make $1 on a slot from 100 credits played, a dollar slot would have to have a 99% payback, a quarter slot would have to have a 96% payback, and a nickel slot would have to have an 80% payback.
Also, I have found that the slots downtown pay off better than the ones on the Strip, just as you're more likely to find full-pay VP downtown...and I have even heard stories that they have blackjack where a blackjack pays 3-2!
onenickelmiracle

There seems to be one exception: dollar Megabucks machines don't pay back as much as other dollar machines. (At least, that's the impression I get from the statewide data, which I may be reading wrong.)
Otherwise, there's an explanation: in order for the casino to make $1 on a slot from 100 credits played, a dollar slot would have to have a 99% payback, a quarter slot would have to have a 96% payback, and a nickel slot would have to have an 80% payback.
Also, I have found that the slots downtown pay off better than the ones on the Strip, just as you're more likely to find full-pay VP downtown...and I have even heard stories that they have blackjack where a blackjack pays 3-2!


Megabucks used to be 89% and has since been changed to 86% with the progressive structure neutered which effectively makes the record jackpots realistically unbreakable.
#FreeNATHAN #Paytheslaves
terapined
I was listening to gambling with an edge radio show earlier this year and they had a AP slot player on the show. He looks for the progressive jackpot slot machines and if he thikks the machine will pay over 100% due to the progressive, he plays the machine hard.
'Everybody's bragging and drinking that wine, I can tell the Queen of Diamonds by the way she shines, Come to Daddy on an inside straight, I got no chance of losing this time' -Grateful Dead- 'Loser'
AlanMendelson


There's lots of things I've heard that I suspect are myths, like slots near the door are looser/tighter, slots on the ends of banks are looser/tighter.. Don't know if there's anything to it.


Years ago the casinos actually did do things like this -- 'seed the floor' with looser machines in visible areas to generate interest.
But the latest thing I heard was that the 'looser machines' are now put in the back of the casino to force players to walk through the casino to get to them.

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But I haven't played slots in years except for the occassional $20 in Megabucks.
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