This does not mean, of course, that Live Keno, or Video Keno, are no longer a viable playing option. This, combined with the lower-scale pay tables which have recently been introduced in most casinos - especially those on the Las Vegas Strip (and the Corporate-owned and/or operated properties) - means that the cost of the game has risen exponentially, while the profits from hits has diminished similarly. This means that "patterns" which we, the humans, can discern in nature (and in Keno) are now far less frequent than before, and, consequently, the winning events using such patterns are likewise less common. The Meta-Game randomization is used as a non-learning closed-universe AI (Artificial Intelligence), which then uses a three-tiered "scramble" protocol to "choose" sets of binary code and/or "clumps" several million times per second, even in between each event.
I describe how the RNG works in my book: "Powerful Profits from Keno", where I also explain why a "true RNG" really doesn't exist, and how, therefore, the program actually works to simulate a true-random protocol.
Third, Video Keno (or any computerized Keno game) these days works off of a multi-tiered program using a closed-universe meta-game randomization, which is two generations further evolved from the basic Random Number Generator (RNG). Many casinos offer both kinds of Live Keno games (like Palace Station in Las Vegas, for example).
Second, Live Keno games that use a computer for drawing numbers, now mostly do so by using the same program that's used in Video Keno. Hi there - It's been a while since I've been to this forum, and I thought I'd add some words for thought to this thread.įirst, Live Keno that draws numbers by the "blower" or "bird cage" is as random as the balls, the bubble, the cage, dirt, wear-and-tear, and other "human" factors can make them.