respectively, at which it is still in the player’s interest to play, rather than to
cash in. If the number in the second column is 1, it means that the player
should play until his bankroll exceeds the number in the third column or
go bust. The fourth column shows the value of the promotion at the initial
bankroll.
These calculations required much more computer time than for the phan-
tom bonus, the most difficult case was Cryptologic Double Bonus video poker
with 1% bonus on winnings with b = 1, this took about 16 hours on a com-
puter with a 2.2 GHz Intel Pentium processor. This is probably due to the
fractions involved. The calculations had to be done using exact arithmetic,
the standard 16 digits numerical precision was not enough, it sometimes
caused the iterations to diverge. Some calculations were done using smaller
numbers (e.g., m = b = 10 instead of m = b = 100) and then scaled up. As
a consequence, the numbers in the second and third columns are not always
exact, but they are always accurate within one maximum bet.
There are some new phenomena with the loss rebate which do not occur
with the phantom bonus. It is clearly never in the player’s interest to stop
if his bankroll does not exceed the phantom bonus. With the loss rebate, if
the house edge is too high, the player should simply not play. Such games
are the tie bet in baccarat and the coin flip with the probability of winning
0.45, these games are not included in the tables. If it is not in the player’s
interest to play at the initial bankroll, he should not play at all. Even for
other games, the strategy is not always “aim for a high target or go bust”,
but “aim for a high target or stop at a stop loss limit greater than 0”. For
example, when playing blackjack with the 10% loss rebate, the player should
stop when his losses exceed 7.5 maximum bets or when his winnings exceed
7 maximum bets, with the additional 1% bonus on profits, the limits are 8
maximum bets either way. This assumes that the initial bankroll is more
than 7.5 or 8 maximum bets. The additional 1% bonus on winnings calls for
a slightly more aggressive strategy in general.
It is interesting to note that when the stop loss limit it 0, the target
bankroll for the 10% loss rebate on 100 units is the same as for the 10 unit
phantom bonus, the calculations in the next section will explain this. This
also shows that the loss rebate requires a much less aggressive strategy.
Many observations are the same as for the phantom bonus. The value of
the promotions, and also the upper bound on the bankroll at which the player
should stop playing both increase with b, while the lower bound decreases
with b. The value of these promotions is maximal at the initial bankroll.
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