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Jungle Jim is a five reel, fifteen payline, and one hundred and fifty coin slot machine. The multiple paylines increase your chances of winning. Jungle Jim has a wild symbol, a scatter symbol, and a Gator Alley bonus game. The Wild symbol substitutes for other symbols to complete winning combinations. The Wild symbol does not substitute for the Scatter symbol to complete scatter winning combinations. Or the Bonus symbol to activate the Gator Alley bonus game.
Winning Wizards is a five reel, five payline, and
five coin slot machine. The multiple paylines increase
your chances of winning. There are no wild symbols
and the maximum payout is 10,000 coins.
For every coin that you bet, you enable
another payline. You are paid out for winning combinations
on enabled paylines only.
King Cashalot is a five reel, nine payline, and forty-five coin slot machine. King Cashalot has a wild, multiplier symbol, a scatter symbol, a bonus game and a Progressive Jackpot. The King symbol is a wild, multiplier symbol. This means it substitutes for any other symbol to complete winning combinations, except the Jester symbol to complete scatter winning combinations, and the Dragon symbol to trigger the bonus game. The King symbol doubles the payout of any combination it completes. Multiple King symbols on an enabled payline create King winning combinations as shown in the Regular Payout Schedule. King winning combination payouts are not doubled. The Jester symbol is a scatter symbol. This means that it does not need to appear in a line on an enabled payline to win. It can be scattered anywhere on the five reels, provided two or more Jester symbols appear.
King Cashalot has a Bonus Feature, the Treasure bonus game. Three Dragon symbols scattered on the reels 2, 3 and 4 activate the Treasure bonus game.
You only qualify for the Progressive Jackpot if you bet the maximum of forty-five coins per spin. This is five coins per payline or $2.25 per spin. If you are playing the Progressive, and five King symbols line up on the ninth enabled payline, you win the Progressive Jackpot.
Most modern slot
machines are designed to look and feel like the old mechanical models,
but they work on a complete different principle. The outcome of each
pull is actually controlled by a central computer inside the machine,
not by the motion of the reels.
The computer uses step
motors to turn each reel and stop it at the predetermined point. Step
motors are driven by short digital pulses of electricity controlled by
the computer, rather than the fluctuating electrical current that drives
an ordinary electric motor. These pulses move the motor a set increment,
or step, with great precision.
But even though the
computer tells the reels where to stop, the games are not pre-programmed
to pay out at a certain time. A random number generator at the heart of
the computer ensures that each pull has an equal shot at hitting the
jackpot.
Whenever the slot
machine is turned on, the random number generator is spitting out whole
numbers (typically between 1 and several billion) hundreds of times a
second. The instant you pull the arm back or press the button, the
computer records the next few numbers from the random number generator.
Then it feeds these numbers through a simple program to determine where
the reels should stop.
.
You pull the handle or
press the button, and the computer records the next three numbers from
the random number generator. The first number is used to determine the
position of the first reel, the second number is used for the second
reel and the third number is used for the third reel. For this example,
let's say the first number is 123,456,789.
To determine the
position of the first reel, the computer divides the first random number
by a set value. Typically, slot machines divide by 32, 64,128, 256 or
512. In this example, we'll say the computer divides by 64.
When the computer
divides the random number by the set value, it records the remainder of
the quotient. In our example, it finds that 64 goes into 123,456,789 a
total of 1,929,012 times with a remainder of 21.
Obviously, the
remainder can't be more than 64 or less than 0, so there are only 64
possible end results of this calculation. The 64 possible values act as
stops on a large virtual reel.
Each of the 64 stops
on the virtual reel corresponds to one of the 22 stops on the actual
reel. The computer consults a table that tells it how far to move the
actual reel for a particular value on the virtual reel. Since there are
far more virtual stops than actual stops, some of the actual stops will
be linked to more than one virtual stop.
Computer systems have made slot machines a lot more adaptable, players
can simply press a button to play a game, rather than pull the handle.
For the manufacturers
and slot proprietors, one of the main advantages of the computer system
is that they can easily configure how often the machine pays out (how
loose or tight it is)
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