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High Energy.
THE GAME:.
The "HIGH ENERGY" slot machine is a "Three lines" payout with two 5000 Coins Jackpots.
HOW TO PLAY:.
1. Verify that you have credits in the credit window.
2. Select the coin value you want to play.
3. Press "Bet1" once, twice, or three times depending on how many coins you want to bet, then "Spin" or "Bet Max" and will start spinning automatically with a 3 coins bet.
-1 coin: you play line 1.
-2 coins: you play lines 1 and 2
-3 coins: you play lines 1, 2 and 3.
SPECIAL FEATURES :.
Each time you get a battery on a reel it will be added on the track.
-If all the potentiometers have turned for at least one step, 3 coins are paid, and the potentiometers turn 1 step back.
-If the potentiometers reaches step 8, 100 coins are paid, and the potentiometers turn back to 0.
-If the potentiometers reaches step 8, 5000 coins are paid, and the two potentiometers turn back to 0.
-When you get three "High Energy" symbols, you get paid 2500 coins on center line, 2500 coins on upper line, 5000 coins on lower line.
A standard slotmachine with
some 'crazy' sound effects. The machine consists of colorful
Seven symbols. The game has only 3 different symbols which
makes it a fast and easy game to play. Hit 3 Red Seven symbols
for the jackpot of 400 coins. The jackpot is relatively small
but gets won more often. You can play with coins as low as 5
cents but also bigger coins up to 5 dollars a coin. Maximum
bet is 3 coins.
Mid-Life Crisis
is a 5-reel, system-wide Progressive Slot machine. 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 $25,000 every time the progressive jackpot is
won. This machine may only be played in the single denomination
of $.25. 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. Win by
lining up items on any of the nine paylines. Receive 5 Sports
Cars on any max pay line and you win the $100,000 sports
car super jackpot or $100,000 in cool hard cash! It is your choice!
There are two bonus rounds attainable in Mid-Life Crisis. Hit
three mid-life symbols (bald guy, toupee and gold chain) anywhere
on the screen and they will assemble to pay you a big money scatter
bonus. Or, hit three lovely ladies and you enter
the fountain of youth bonus round, where you can win up to 4,000
credits when you have bet with max coins and max paylines. Then
find where all the money is hiding. You will be presented with
adventure ideas, which is located on the left side
of the screen or the miracle youth tonic, which is located on
the right hand side of the screen. Keep choosing adventure ideas
until one of your adventures turns into funny symbol.
For example, one of the lovely ladies can turn into an older
woman or a baby. If you choose the Miracle Youth Tonic, all of
the wins will cycle through automatically, ending with a skeleton.
In each sub game, you will win an amount relative to your total
bet on the spin. 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. To see what each combination pays, just click on the Pay
Table button.
Payout percentages are the most commonly used form of differentiating slot machines, and the most often used form of advertising slots by the casinos. Many casinos offer "98% payback slots " or some other high number as their payback percentage. This is most often thought of as "98% of the total amount of money deposited into the machine will be returned to the player". People tend to think this means if they play through $100, they should expect to have $98 come back to them. This is a bit of a fallacy however, because the return percentage is a theoretical one based on an infinite timeline. This means if you were to keep playing the slots game forever, you would eventually have made back 98% of what you put in. Most people don't usually play long enough to hit a big jackpot however, and winning that jackpot is part of the calculated 98%. This means if you play and don't win big, chances are you're actual return percentage will be significantly lower.
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What do I mean by traps? I mean slot machines that aren't entirely up front about what they offer you. The biggest trap by far is the full coins trap. There are many slot machines in Vegas that advertise great payback percentages and amazing jackpots, but they also advertise themselves as 'quarter slots ' or 'nickel slots ', which is a little misleading. The majority of these machines require you to play multiple coins in order to be eligible for some or any of its available jackpots. Many of them require that you are playing the maximum number of coins possible on the machine in order to be able to win the jackpot that probably convinced you to play it in the first place! So be very wary, you may find yourself in front of a machine that has three cars lined up in a row making you think you've won the grand jackpot, but no lights will flash, no sounds will erupt, if you only played one coin.
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There are many, many myths around the Internet trying to convince you that the casinos in Las Vegas have masterminded the way they place their slots , with loose slots more visible than tight slots . You will undoubtedly read about how slot machines near the isles, on raised carousels, or near the entrances and exits pay out more and more often than other slots in the casino. The logic is based on the idea that the casino wants any winner on a slot machine to be seen by as many people as possible, convincing them to play too. While this may be a fairly logical assumption, it seems as though if it was true once in the past, it sadly no longer is. Recently Michael Shackleford of the wizard of odds has done some fairly systematic tests of casinos around Vegas and found no difference between the payouts on machines located randomly, and those in previously though of 'loose' spots.
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