|

|
The object of Super 7 5-Reel
9-Line Progressive Slots is to obtain a winning combination by
spinning the reels. You can bet from 1 to 45 coins. The COIN
VALUE may also be changed from as low as 1¢ to a maximum of $1.00. Your wager is placed on each line, up
to 5 coins per line. Wins are recorded from the left side of
the machine to the right. Winning totals vary depending on the
symbols you have lined up. Also, if you receive 2 or more scatter
symbols anywhere on the screen, you win the corresponding prize
form 2X to 500X your bet. The Super 7 symbol is wild and completes
winning combinations with 9, 10, J, Q, K, and A symbols. Five
Super 7 symbols on max bet wins the progressive jackpot. Within
the game, click on the PAY TABLE button to see the winning combinations
and paylines.
Bonkers!
is a 3-reel 1-line classic slot machine. The pay table is displayed
on the machine. Bonkers! slots may be played in denominations
of $.05, $.25, $.50, $1, and $5. Once you hit two Bonkers!
on the pay line you receive 3 guaranteed free winning spins.
When you hit three Bonkers!, you receive 10 guaranteed
free winning spins. These spins are registered on the Free
Spins meter just to the right of the pay table, and additional
free spins may not be won during your free spins. Hitting three
red 7s during the free spins will end the free
re-spins and return you to regular play. Bonkers! may also be
configured as a local progressive game, where a 3-coin bet (max
bet) hitting three red 7s on the payline wins
you the progressive jackpot total, the current jackpot is located
just above the reels.
The world of slot machine gambling, limited to a few geographical areas
by law, remained unchanged for decades. This is how the world of slot
machines came to be and existed until 1980 when Bally Manufacturing changed
the picture with an electronic slot machine that included multiple coin
play and more payout combinations. This particular version became more
or less a basic framework to be imitated by others. In the 1990s the
competitive market swelled to accommodate the growth of casino gaming
in the United States. Machines became more complex, including enticing
graphics, movie and video clips, second-chances, hidden jackpots, a variety
of progressives.
For the most part, the typical, old-fashioned real reel machine bit
the dust and was replaced by a video screen that simulates reels. Today,
these multiple payoff lines and payoffs provided by myriad machine makers,
are-because they have to be--totally controlled by a computer chip.
.
|
|
 |