Online slots show a number called RTP — Return to Player.
It is a long-term average. If RTP is 96%, the game is designed to give back 96% of all bets and keep 4% as the house edge.
High RTP Demo: 96% vs 100%
Two simple slot-style games: on the left configurable RTP (default 96%), on the right RTP 100%.
Every spin costs 1 coin. The demo shows your balance and the observed RTP from your own spins.
This demo lets you see the difference between a high RTP game and a lower RTP game.
- Game A: RTP is configurable with the slider (default 96%).
- Game B: RTP is fixed at 100%, so there is no house edge.
Each spin costs 1 coin. For both games:
- you either lose the coin,
- or win 2 coins.
The only thing that changes is the chance to win.
For 96% RTP the win chance is about 48%.
For 100% RTP the win chance is exactly 50%.
The panels show:
- your current balance,
- number of spins,
- total bet and coins returned,
- and the observed RTP from your own results (coins returned ÷ total bet × 100%).
To really feel the difference:
- Click Auto spin ×1000 and let both games play.
- Compare the balances and observed RTP.
- Move the slider to lower RTP for Game A and run another 1 000 spins.
Sometimes the 96% game will look better in a single run. That is random variance.
But if you repeat 1 000 spins several times, you will usually see the same pattern:
- the high RTP (100%) game hovers around break-even,
- the lower RTP game slowly drifts down.
That is what RTP and house edge mean in practice—not a prediction for one spin, but a long-term tilt that you can actually see on the screen.





















