|

|
Gladiators Gold is a three reel, three payline, and
three coin slot machine. The multiple paylines increase
your chances of winning. There are no wild symbols
and the maximum payout is 4,000 coins.
For every coin that you bet, you enable another
payline. You are paid out for winning combinations
on enabled paylines only.
Red Sands is a 5 reel and 20 payline video slot with an Australian Marsupial theme. The Kangaroo is a substitute symbol while a breathtaking Moonscape is the scatter symbol and triggers a respin feature whenever 2 or more appear left to right or right to left. The triggering Moonscape reels are held during the respin round, up to 10 respins. Only scatter pays are awarded during the re-spin round. During the respin round, the Kangaroo can substitute for a Moonscape. The prize is doubled when one or more Kangaroos appear in a winning combination.
Just where you'll play should depend on what kind of slots you enjoy and what the casino can offer you as a player.
There are literally thousands of online casinos, some better than others, some outright bad. We've only listed
reputable online casinos that we've dealt with ourselves here at Slots Gambling -
so you can be comfortable choosing from any casinos you see here.
While there are lots of different casinos - there's still only a handful of software providers that make the
casino software these casinos operate off. What that means, is that while there's different management, bonuses,
policies and sometimes slightly different game suites at each casino - most casinos will offer a downloadable
software package that fits into one of only a few types. Casino Tropez and Club Dice casino for example are both
great places to play - but they share the same Playtech software - and therefore they both have the same type of slot
machines.
Try to find a casino that you enjoy and stay there. They offer different themes, different bonuses to new players,
and depending on which type of software they're running - different games. No casino is 'best' all around - it's
really a matter of preference.
On our .
|
|
 |