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What Is a Slot?

A slot is a position or spot within a sequence or schedule. It can also be used as a name for an expansion port, such as an ISA or PCI slot on a computer motherboard.

There are many types of slots, including progressive machines that link to other slot games and share a jackpot pool, flashy slots with Wilds that substitute for other symbols, and slots with bonus levels that unlock if the player hits certain combinations. Each slot has its own pay table and rules, and you can read these on the machine itself by clicking the “help” or “i” buttons on the display screen or asking a casino attendant.

You can judge a slot’s volatility by its gap between the jackpots for different symbol combinations. The larger the gap, the higher the volatility. However, keep in mind that a gap doesn’t necessarily mean that the machine will be hot or cold. Whether a slot is hot or cold isn’t determined by the number of spins it has been through, but rather by how often the specific symbols appear.

Charles Fey’s original slot machine was more advanced than Sittman and Pitt’s invention. It allowed for automatic payouts, had three reels and a variety of symbols, such as hearts, spades, horseshoes, and liberty bells (three aligned liberty bells were the highest win). Fey’s design was copied by others and became the foundation for modern slot machines. Today, microprocessors control slot machines, and manufacturers program them to weight particular symbols based on their appearance on each physical reel. This gives the appearance that some symbols are more likely to appear than others, even though they all have equal probability of appearing on a given reel.