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Speed limits are to be imposed on online slot machines in a crackdown by the official gambling watchdog.
The Gambling Commission has ordered that slot speeds should not be faster than 2.5 seconds per spin to prevent players rapidly building up losses.
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It follows a UK analysis of 11 academic studies which all found faster speeds of play were rated as more exciting for all types of gamblers including first-timers and problem gamers.
“Faster speeds of play encourage more wagers, longer game play, and caused players, particularly problem gamblers, to experience difficulty in ceasing gambling,” according to the research by Mark Griffiths, the UK’s leading gambling researcher at De Montfort University.
Slot machines are the most addictive as they deploy a psychological trick known as a “variable ratio schedule” where a player is driven to keep going because of the unpredictability of when a win will come up. The quicker the spins, the less time to consider the consequences.
The Commission has also banned online slot machines that use images and sounds to con players into believing losses are wins. Operators will no longer be allowed to use jazzy graphics to celebrate a win of, say 50 pence, when in fact the player has lost £1.50 on the original £2 stake.
Also outlawed will be autoplay where the reel spins automatically dozens of times as well as features that give the impression to gamblers that they are in control of the machines such as “slam stops” when they can halt the reel.
Online slot machines account for two-thirds of all gambling on the internet and earn £2.2 billion a year for operators.
This is despite evidence that they have the highest average losses per player of any products. Typically, operators are making a guaranteed profit of £4 in every £100 by setting the win return rates at 96 per cent.
Nigel Huddleston, the culture minister, said: 'Today's steps will help curb the intensity of online gambling, introducing greater protections that will reduce the risk of gambling related harm.
“I welcome the tough measures as we continue our comprehensive review of gambling laws to make sure they're fit for the digital age.'
Also banned will be reverse withdrawals, a controversial feature that allows a player to immediately re-gamble their winnings – which would otherwise have been paid into their account and could only be used after being processed days later.
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Under the new rules that take effect on October 31, operators will be required by law to display to slot machine players their total losses and the time played throughout their session.
Neil McArthur, Gambling Commission chief executive, said there was evidence the features being banned increased the risk of harm to customers.
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“This is another important step in making gambling safer and where the evidence shows that there are other opportunities to do that we are determined to take them,” he said.
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Charles Ritchie, who set up Gambling With Lives after the death of his son, Jack, from gambling, said it was a welcome “small step in the right direction,” but the watchdog needed to go further with tough limits on maximum bets.
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The measures follow the introduction of new controls on online age and ID verification, a ban on gambling on credit cards and new rules to stamp out irresponsible “VIP customer” practices.