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Golden Goose Winning Wizards is a 5 reel, 20 payline, 200 coin slot machine with a wild/multiplier symbol, a scatter symbol, and four Golden Goose bonus games. This is a coin-based game, meaning your credits are converted to coins. To qualify for the Golden Goose bonus games, you must place an additional bet of 5 coins and play all paylines. If you wager the Golden Goose bet, the Golden Goose may appear ramdomly at the end of any spin to award you 1 of 4 bonus games.
The Golden Egg bonus game.
The Golden Goose awards an egg that is worth up to 2,000 coins.
The Golden Reels bonus game.
Eggs are displayed on all five reels. Select one egg from each reel to win up to a total of 5,000 coins.
The Money or the Egg bonus games.
Select the cash to win up to 10,000 coins.
Or the Egg and win up to 50 free spins with up to 3X multiplier.
You will love the North American Indian theme on Raindance video slot. Raindance has several animated symbols including an impressive Chief symbol. This 5 reel 20 payline slot some nice new features. The Chief only appears on reels 1 and 5 and substitutes for all other symbols including the Coyotes. The prize is doubled when one or more Chiefs appear in a winning combination. The Howling Wolf symbol triggers the free games bonus feature and the Chief symbol is a Substitute. You can win re spins during the free games. 3, 4, or 5 scatters occurring after a re-spin triggers 10, 15, or 100 free games respectively. Free game prizes are multiplied by 3, 4, or 5 according to the number of scatters triggering the bonus feature. 3 or more scatters occurring after a re-spin awards the same number of free spins as the original trigger. The re spin locks the Wolf/Chief symbol and only spins the remaining reels.
The number of games and manufacturers of coin-operated machines are
almost end less. Choose from slot, gumball, cigar, music, clocks, cash
registers, pinball, gun, and weigh machines, horse gaming and golf,
to name a few. Slot authoritarian, Marshall Fey, author of "Slot
Machines:
A Pictoral History of the First 100 Years," said the slot machine
mushroomed into a premier collectible after 1976, the year that California
legalized antique slot machine collecting. Many states have since followed
suit.
Robert Levy of Pennsauken, N.J., who has more than 250 antique slots,
said he collects because "they increase in value every year. They
are a good investment, very entertaining, they make wonderful banks,
and they will never be made again." His oldest is dated 1893. Levy,
who is for two price guides in the U.S. and one in England, said he
has bought and sold slot machines for 14 years. For some collectors,
"seek and find" offers the most enjoyment. The rare ones are
difficult to locate because many of them were taken to the city dump
and are lost forever. Some collectors like the "thrill" of
owning an illegal item.
Not every state condones ownership of a slot machine, and some states
require that it be a certain age before it can be sold. Levy said the
Attorney General's office of each state regulates the sale of slot machines,
and it is best to check with that office before buying. Cosmetic changes
over the years are not the only consequences of the modern world of
gaming. "With the old machines, you played one coin at a time and
it paid on the center line.
You could have fun playing and watching and waiting for the symbols
to come up. Today's electronic slots play up to 60 lines at one time;
they will take $100 dollar bills and will, geometrically, take money
unbelieveably quicker. You can sit down and in a matter of seconds,
your money is gone, and so is the fun of the game.
The ones that play up to 60 lines let the casino take in less on each
pull, but it (the casino) makes more money in the long run," Levy
said.
Click below pictures to see some vintage machine pictures we collected,
.
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