MGM Grand Hotel & Casino provides the maximum gaming experience; poker, blackjack, slot machines, race and sports betting, and more!
- Appendices
- Slots Analysis
- Miscellaneous
Introduction
Lion's Share was a three-reel progressive slot machine found at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Given how old the machine is, and the high rate of turnover in the gaming business, nobody seems to know for sure the history of the game. However, I think it can be said it is the oldest slot machine in the MGM and the jackpot has not been hit in many years. By today's standards, it is very out of date, with mechanical reels, blurry graphics, and any cash-out requiring a hand pay.
After the original publication of this article, the jackpot was hit on Aug. 24, 2014 for $2.4 million. The rest of this article is unchanged from it's original publication, before the jackpot was hit.
Here are some of the rumors about Lion's Share.
- It has been on the floor since the casino opening in 1993. — I'm not sure if it was there on day one, but based on the look of it, if it wasn't, it dates back to near the beginning.
- Whoever hits the jackpot will get to keep the machine. — I've never seen anything official that says this, but I don't doubt it. The machine is clunky and old and I think the MGM won't want it any more after it hits. The value of an old slot machine like Lion's Share is about $500 at best, so I don't see why the MGM would want to keep it.
- The MGM can't get rid of it until the progressive hits. — There is a lot of truth to this. Some player must win the accumulated money in the progressive, as it is considered player money. The Nevada Gaming Control Board wouldn't let the MGM just keep it. However, they would be allowed to let them move the money to another game, if their proposal of how to do it is accepted by Gaming.
- The jackpot has never been hit — I've heard both this and it was hit twice in the early years but never hit again. I don't know which is true. A change in the EPROM chip could make it more difficult to hit.
- The jackpot started at one million dollars — I can't confirm this either, but assume it to be true below.
Sometimes it is rumored in player circles the game may have a player advantage since the progressive has been growing for 20 years. That is where I come in. This page details my analysis of the game to determine how good of a bet it is.
Rules
The game is a $1 3-coin game. The following is the pay table.
Lion's Share Pay Table
Win | 1 Coins | 2 Coins | 3 Coins |
Three Lions — On Payline | $25,000 | $50,000 | Jackpot |
Three Lions — Off Payline | $500 | $1,000 | $10,000 |
Three sevens | $100 | $200 | $300 |
Three 3-bar | $50 | $100 | $150 |
Three 2-bar | $20 | $40 | $60 |
Three 1-bar | $10 | $20 | $30 |
Any three bar | $5 | $10 | $15 |
Any two lions | $5 | $10 | $15 |
Any one lion | $2 | $4 | $6 |
The lion is wild in any position on the reel. Three positions are visible.
As of May 28, 2014, the jackpot was at $2,378,882.
Analysis
Wizard Data Only
I started playing this game on Jan 14, 2014. Between my own play and 153 spins seen on YouTube videos I have recorded how often each reel lands on each symbol. The following table shows my results.
Lion's Share Reel Survey
Symbol | Reel 1 | Reel 2 | Reel 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Lion -- on payline | 15 | 10 | 10 |
Lion -- off payline | 38 | 36 | 21 |
Seven | 91 | 70 | 81 |
3-bar | 202 | 295 | 81 |
2-bar | 469 | 716 | 102 |
1-bar | 914 | 265 | 860 |
Blank | 777 | 1,114 | 1,351 |
Total | 2,506 | 2,506 | 2,506 |
Based on the pay table and observed results, the following table show the probability and return of each event. The return column is the product of the win, probability, and (1/3). The reason for dividing by 3 is the bet amount of $3. In other words, the return column is relative to a $3 bet.
Lion's Share Return Table — Wizard Data Only
Win | Pays | Probability | Return |
---|---|---|---|
Three Lions -- On Payline | $2,378,882 | 0.0000000953 | 0.075579 |
Three Lions -- Off Payline | $10,000 | 0.0000047070 | 0.015690 |
Three sevens | $300 | 0.0001140740 | 0.011407 |
Three 3-bar | $150 | 0.0006140249 | 0.030701 |
Three 2-bar | $60 | 0.0033567039 | 0.067134 |
Three 1-bar | $30 | 0.0170215402 | 0.170215 |
Any three bar | $15 | 0.1267797886 | 0.633899 |
Any two lions | $15 | 0.0003959927 | 0.001980 |
Any one lion | $6 | 0.0367851279 | 0.073570 |
Total | 0.1850720544 | 1.080176 |
So, based on this small sample size, the game returns 108.1% of money bet. With one or two coins bet, the return drops to 99.4%. Based on the small sample size, I would consider these results rough.
Wizard, AxiomOfChoice and SmokaLott Data Combined
Mgm Slots Online
On March 2, 2012, somebody named SmokaLott posted at Vegas Message Board that he played Lion's Share 10,000 times and got a lion on the center payline 33 times on reel 1, 42 on reel 2, and 34 on reel 3.
In early February, 2014, forum member AxiomOfChoice sent me his data on payline lions. In 1,896 spins he got the lion on the center payline 5 times on reel 1, 4 on reel 2, and 6 on reel 3. Looking at center payline lions only, here is the combined data.
Center Payline Lions
Player | Reel 1 | Reel 2 | Reel 3 | Spins | Lions per 100 Spins |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wiz | 15 | 10 | 10 | 2,506 | 1.40 |
AxiomOfChoice | 5 | 4 | 6 | 1,896 | 0.79 |
Smokalot | 33 | 42 | 34 | 10,000 | 1.09 |
Total | 53 | 56 | 50 | 14,402 | 1.10 |
Combining this data, here is the center payline lion probability on each reel.
- Reel 1: 0.0036800
- Reel 2: 0.0038883
- Reel 3: 0.0034717
Assuming these probabilities, and otherwise using the data from my spins for the other symbols, the return table looks as follows.
Lion's Share Return Table — Combined Data
Win | Pays | Probability | Return |
---|---|---|---|
Three Lions -- On Payline | $2,378,882 | 0.0000000525 | 0.041647 |
Three Lions -- Off Payline | $10,000 | 0.0000041103 | 0.013701 |
Three sevens | $300 | 0.0001090687 | 0.010907 |
Three 3-bar | $150 | 0.0005989446 | 0.029947 |
Three 2-bar | $60 | 0.0033113213 | 0.066226 |
Three 1-bar | $30 | 0.0168744217 | 0.168744 |
Any three bar | $15 | 0.1266965675 | 0.633483 |
Any two lions | $15 | 0.0003578085 | 0.001789 |
Any one lion | $6 | 0.0349819170 | 0.069964 |
Total | 0.1829342121 | 1.036408 |
The lower right cell shows a total return of 103.6%, based on three coins bet. With one or two coins bet the return drops to 98.4%.
Based on this combined data, the probability of hitting the jackpot is about 1 in 19.0 million. It is my understanding the jackpot started at one million dollars. If that is the case, and assuming everybody bets $3 at a time, the game would have been played about 60 million times. In this many spins, the expected number of jackpots is 2.9. The probability of never hitting a jackpot in 60 million spins is about 5.4%. I should remind my readers that each spin is independent, so the odds of hitting the jackpot are the same as it was for every other spin.
AxiomOfChoice is a good member on my forum, so I have no compunction about using his data.
As a scientific kind of guy, I hate to use data from somebody I've never heard of from a two-year-old forum post as the basis of my analysis of a game. However, The SmokaLot data looks reasonable to me, and his results are similar to the combined results of AxiomOfChoice and I.
I would like to return to gather more data, or hire somebody else to do it, but since a recent wave of publicity in the media it has been getting difficult getting on the machine. I would also hate to hog it for hours with a line waiting. For this reason, I am also publishing my results both ways, with my data only as well as the combined results of me, AxiomOfChoice, and SmokaLott.
Miscellaneous pieces of information about Lion's Share.
- Based on the 'combined data,' the probability shown of the jackpot equates to a probability of 1 in 19,040,226.
- The meter goes up by 0.75% of money bet.
- Based on an Internet post, the jackpot was at $2,229,097 on March 19, 2011. This suggests a rate of increase of $167 per day.
- For the lowest-level player, slot play earns free play and comps both at a rate of 0.33% of money bet.
More Photos
External Links
- Lion's Share official web site.
- Discussion of Lion's Share at my forum Wizard of Vegas.
- The legend and cult of the $2.345 million Lion's Share slot machine at MGM Grand — Article in the Las Vegas Sun
Written by: Michael Shackleford
It may not be the biggest jackpot in Las Vegas history, but it’s certainly the most-anticipated.
A slot machine that has entered the lore of Las Vegas, the Lion’s Share slot machine at MGM Grand, has hit for $2.4 million. Which you’d have known already had you taken the time to read this blog post’s headline. Please pay attention.
The jackpot was won on August 22, 2014 by a visitor from New Hampshire, Walter Misco, here with his wife, Linda. Both of whom this Las Vegas blog deeply resents for having won our jackpot, thank you very much.
We totally Photoshopped this photo. Hey, we can’t be everywhere.
The exact jackpot was $2,400,301 and seventy-something cents. We trust the Miscos will get to keep the lion’s share of that amount, although Uncle Sam will be getting a nice chunk of it, too.
The Lion’s Share jackpot has become the stuff of legend because the slot machine in question is the sole remaining machine of its kind at MGM Grand. Back in the ’90s, 50 custom Lion’s Share machines were rolled out. Forty-nine were eventually removed because they weren’t particularly popular, but that all changed when it got down to one Lion’s Share slot left.
The remaining Lion’s Share machine took so long to pay out it’s biggest jackpot (other, smaller jackpots were won along the way), the casino had to grab parts from other, retired machines just to keep it functioning.
A casino executive estimated the Lion’s Share machine was played five times more than the average slot machine on MGM Grand’s casino floor.
One urban legend about the Lion’s Share machine claimed the winner of the progressive jackpot would also get to keep the machine. (MGM Grand has since tried to dispel that notion, but it’s still a possibility.)
Whatever happens to the last Lion’s Share machine, hearing the jackpot was hit is bittersweet for lovers of Las Vegas.
While we’re happy for the couple who won (or at least pretending to be), and for MGM Grand because this machine was a royal pain the ass to maintain (including having to hand pay every time someone cashed out, no matter the amount), the drama and mystique around this legendary machine will be greatly missed.