Nevada gaming revenue up year-on-year in April, but down from March
| By Daniel O'Boyle
Gaming revenue in the state of Nevada was up 8.6% year-on-year to $1.13bn in April, though this total was 16.8% less than in March.
![Nevada Super Bowl](https://igamingbusiness.com/img-srv/079DFOmRHeT4IfWCJmg4AVUx90KjE9ifKTBrfBG9k4s/resizing_type:auto/width:0/height:0/gravity:sm/enlarge:1/ext:webp/strip_metadata:1/quality:90/bG9jYWw6Ly8vaWdhbWluZ2J1c2luZXNzLmNvbS93cC1jb250ZW50L3VwbG9hZHMvMjAyMC8wOC9Cb3VsZGVyLUp1bmN0aW9uLWdlb3RhZ2dlZC1sYXMtdmVnYXMtbmV2YWRhLXVuaXRlZC1zdGF0ZXMtdXNhLTE0OTM4MzUtcHhoZXJlLmNvbV8uanBn.webp)
Slots continued to make up the majority of revenue, at $804.1m, which was up by 1.4% year-on-year, but down 11.0% month-on-month.
Just under half of this total came from multi-denomination slots, where revenue was up by 11.9% to $397.4m.
Revenue from penny slots, meanwhile, was down 10.5% year-on-year to $305.0m. One dollar slots brought in $55.8m, up 1.0% from April 2021.