On our desk this week, the Slots pointer drifted toward Jili Money Coming's rolling progressive, while the Bingo pointer barely moved. The pool sat at ₱420k mid-week. Here is the read for players deciding which side to seat at.
This Week on Our Desk
The slot-side accrual rules are tight. Only qualifying spins at ≥ ₱100 base stake feed the pool at 0.5% of stake. Free-spin rounds and promotional credits sit out. That ties pool growth to high-limit play, not session volume.
Slots Side: What Moved
| Variable | Observed value |
|---|---|
| Pool band | ₱380k–₱480k |
| Qualifying stake | ≥ ₱100 base |
| Per-spin contribution | 0.5% of stake |
| Trigger | 3 scatters, base round |
| Trigger probability | ~1 in 42,000 qualifying spins |
Bingo Side: What Moved
Our Bingo pointer held steady — no progressive on the bingo floor matched this pool. Reading both columns, a slots-curious bingo regular gets a clear answer: the slots side is moving, and only at the ≥ ₱100 stake band.
Trade-off Table
| Axis | Money Coming | Standard slot |
|---|---|---|
| Variance | Higher | Title-typical |
| Bankroll floor | ₱100 min | ₱5–₱20 |
| Hit cadence | ~1 in 42,000 | Title-typical |
Our Desk's Pick (and the Honest Caveat)
On balance, our desk leans toward seating Money Coming only if you would normally play at ≥ ₱100 stakes. One honest caveat: the 1-in-42,000 trigger means most sessions will not see the progressive land. Treat it as an upside layered on a normal session — not a reason to size up.
& Responsible Gaming Reminder
ONLY. PAGCOR-aligned operator. Slot outcomes are not predictable; trigger probabilities are statistical estimates, not session promises. If gambling stops being fun, contact GameCare PH at 1800-1888-1800, or set a deposit limit.
How to Read This Bench Card
Every line on the bench card carries a sample window. The rolling RTP is the geometric mean across the window, not a single-session snapshot. If the published spec RTP is 96.50% and the rolling number reads 96.20% at 4,000 spins, that is inside the ±0.4% noise band — not evidence of a soft title. Convergence to spec sharpens past 10,000 spins; the headline number gets honest there.
Tap-to-spin latency reads as a median, not an average — outliers from network reconnects skew averages. The 0.6–0.9s window is the working band for Manila 4G LTE on a Galaxy A35 / iPhone 15 reference rig. Anything past 1.2s is operator-side, not provider-side, and routes back to the operator audit thread.
Hit frequency is the rate of any-pay results, not bonus-trigger frequency. Bonus-trigger frequency is reported separately because it drives the variance shape that bankroll discipline has to absorb. Read both lines before sizing a session.
What Works · What Doesn't
Pros
- Published RTP sits inside the 96.0–97.1% band benchmarked across the title family, leaving spec headroom on a long enough sample.
- Mobile build holds tap-to-spin in the 0.6–0.9s window on Galaxy A35 / iPhone 15 Manila 4G LTE bench rigs.
- Bonus economics print on a documented trigger curve — variance is upfront, not buried in marketing copy.
Cons
- Hit frequency on the bonus round still asks for a 200-spin floor before the printed RTP starts to converge.
- Mobile portrait mode crops the fifth reel slightly — landscape is the cleaner view for ceiling chasers.
- Buy-in lanes (where supported) cost 75×–150× stake; they shorten variance but compress upside on small bankrolls.
FAQ
How is the rolling RTP measured?
CHWV runs a closed-window bench: the rig opens, the spin counter logs every result, and the rolling RTP only publishes once the sample window closes (typically 4,000–18,000 spins depending on the title family).
Why does the published spec RTP differ from the rolling bench number?
Spec RTP is a long-run mathematical expectation; the rolling bench number is a finite-sample observation. Convergence to spec usually needs 10,000+ spins; below that, deviation of ±0.4% is within statistical noise.
Does this apply to mobile and desktop equally?
CHWV benches mobile-first (Galaxy A35 / iPhone 15 on Manila 4G LTE) because the Pinoy session is mobile-led. Desktop math is identical, but tap-to-spin and frame-rate notes here apply to the mobile build only.
Related Reads
CHWV bench cards out only after the spin window closes. Pick the operator that matches the math, not the marketing.
