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Card Shark is
a 5-reel, system-wide Progressive game, and to view the pay table
you must click on the Pay Table button located next
to the red Cash Out button on the lower left side
of the machine. The progressive jackpot total is displayed on
the bottom of the machine, between your balance and the chips,
and re-starts at $1,000 every time the progressive jackpot is
won. This machine may only be played in the single denomination
of $.01 (thats right, its only a penny!). To play,
put money in the machine by clicking on the chips in the lower
right corner and press Bet Max. This will play the
maximum bet (9 paylines and 45 coins), giving you the maximum
chance to win and automatically spins the reels. If youd
like to play fewer lines or fewer coins per line, just select
the lines you want by using the Select Lines and
Bet One buttons. When you have the bet youd
like, just press Spin, and wait for a win. Remember,
each coin is only one penny, which makes it easy to go
for it! Win by lining up treasures on any of the nine pay
lines. Receive five Starfish on any max bet line
and you win the progressive jackpot! Collect three Treasure
Chests anywhere on the screen and one will magically open,
and you win the amount of treasure (coins) in the treasure chest.
Get three Card Shark icons anywhere on your screen
and enter the card shark bonus round where you can play high/low
with the card shark. The Card Shark deals you three
cards face down. Then, simply determine if the next card is higher
or lower than the last card. Each correct prediction wins an
amount relative to your total bet on the spin (the more you bet
the more coins you receive). Note: Player loses ties and Aces
are always high. All of the pays, with the exception of the bonus
game winners, are played from left to right. That means that
you win when you line up the icons starting from the leftmost
wheel. Just click on the Pay Table button to see
what each combination pays.
The SWAT TEAM symbol is wild and substitutes for
any other symbol to complete winning combinations.
A single SWAT TEAM symbol doubles the payout of any
combination it completes.
Two SWAT TEAM symbols quadruple the payout of any
combination they complete.
Three SWAT TEAM symbols on the payline create a
winning combination as shown in the Payout Table.
Example:
1. A single SWAT TEAM symbol on the payline completes
the winning combination of a single Fly Swat symbol.
With 2 coins bet, a single Fly Swat symbol combination
pays out 4 coins. However, a SWAT TEAM symbol is displayed,
so the payout is 4 coins x 2 = 8 coins.
2. Two SWAT TEAM symbols and a 3-Bar symbol on the
payline, combine to produce a three 3-Bar symbols
combination. With 2 coins bet, a three 3-Bar symbols
combination pays out 80 coins. However, two SWAT TEAM
symbols are showing, so the payout is 80 coins x 4
= 320 coins.
Slot machines are actual free-standing "machines" easily identified by their spinning reels and pull handles. The concept is simple, drop in some coins, pull the handle and hope the reel
symbols line up. Different symbols win different amounts, and there's usually a jackpot available to be won.
Slot machines are a total game of chance. There are no rules to learn, and the outcome is totally random. The ease of play, the potential huge payoffs, the noise and the excitement level
around the slot area all contribute to a high entertainment value for some.
Slot machines come in a variety of forms with diverse symbols on the wheels and numerous payout systems. Slot machines can have from three to five reels/wheels and one to five payoff lines.
In all of them the basic idea is the same, to line up particular symbols on the payout line. The less likely a combination is to occur, the greater the payoff.
The most basic slot machines require you to bet one coin (a fixed amount such as a dollar), they have only three reels, only one payout line, and pay a multiple of the bet coins value
(e.g. Three cherries on the payout line will result in a payout 300 times the bet coins value). The player inserts the coin and pulls a handle (or presses a button on the front panel) and waits for
the wheels to stop on the payout line to see if, and how much they have won (the payout symbols and payoff values are posted on the front of the machine). The more complex machines accept
more than one coin (up to five), can have up to five wheels, and many also have up to five payout lines (three across and two diagonal).
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