Log-on technology keeps players coming back
Friday, November 18, 2011
By John G
Casinos are always looking for ways to drive repeat business, to entice players to come again.
International Game Technology has come up with a video poker variation that certainly would keep me coming back, provided the casino put a high enough pay table on the game to attract my business in the first place.
It’s called Power Quads, and it was one of the new video poker games IGT showed at the Global Gaming Expo at the Sands Expo and Convention Center in Las Vegas.
In Power Quads, you create a log-on, then go about collecting four-of-a-kind hands. When you’ve drawn quads in all 13 card denominations, you collect a 2,000-coin bonus.
That’s not something you’re going to do in one short session. In 9-6 Jacks or Better, four of a kind turns up an average of once per 423 hands. Figure a player at an average speed of about 500 hands an hour draws quads a little more than once an hour, and a fast player might get the average to twice an hour. To get all 13 – and if you get the same four of a kind multiple times, you still need all the others at least once – is going to take some time.
Hence the log-on. Use it, and Power Quads will remember you when you come back. Your previous quads will be remembered only on a return trip to the same property. But even if it takes several visits to complete your Power Quads, the bonus will be more than welcome.
IGT also showed a variation called Fast Fours that plays much like Quick Quads in that if you have three of a kind and the other two cards add up to the same denomination, it’s paid as a four of a kind. Face cards are not eligible for Quick Quads bonuses, and Aces count only as 1. In Fast Fours, Aces count as 1 or 11, and faces count as 10. So Ace-Ace-Ace-6-5, with the 6-5 counting as 11, is a Fast Four, as is King-King-King-6-4. It costs an extra coin per hand to buy into the feature.
Spin Fever, another IGT video poker offering, has a bit of a community gaming feel about it. Anytime you get a flush, full house or four of a kind, lights up an arrow or raises a multiplier associated with that arrow. Your first flush will light up the flush arrow and show a 1x multiplier, a second flush raises the multiplier up to 2x, and so on, up to 10×.
The arrows act as indicators for a spin for a spin of a bonus wheel. You can go to the bonus spin anytime you have an arrow lit. You can spin with one category with a 1x multiplier, or you can wait to raise the multiplier higher or to light more indicators. If you have all three arrows lit, then when you spin the wheel, you get the three bonus awards, one for the amount indicated by each arrow.
Community-style bonusing hasn’t really taken hold in video poker the way it has on slot machines, but there is the possibility for a shared experience here. If more than one player is qualified for a wheel spin, then both or all may get in on the same spin of the wheel. Then if you and I both have the flush arrow lit, we’ll both get the amount indicated, times our own multipliers. If you have all three lit and I have only one, you’ll get all three awards, and I’ll just get one.
But we don’t have to spin together. If you want your own spin, it’s your choice.
- John Grochowski has covered the casino industry for 15 years in newspapers and magazines, and is the author of six books on casino games. Readers can email him at casinoanswerman@casinoanswerman.com.
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