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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.
Fortune Cookie. is a three reel, one
payline, and two coin slot machine.
It has a wild, multiplier symbol and the maximum payout
is 1,600 coins.
The Fortune Cookie. symbol is wild and substitutes
for any other symbol to complete winning combinations.
A single Fortune Cookie symbol doubles the payout of any
combination it completes.
Two Fortune Cookie. symbols quadruple the payout of
any combination they complete.
CashSplash Video Slot is a 5 reel, 15 payline, and 15 coin progressive jackpot slot machine. CashSplash slot has a wild symbol, a scatter symbol, and a Progressive Jackpot. The CashSplash symbol is a wild symbol. This means that it substitutes for any other symbol to complete winning combinations, except the Blue-Scatter symbol and the Progressive Jackpot. The Blue-Scatter 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 three or more Blue-Scatter symbols appear.
, that to this day has some influence.
In the 1890's, slot machines can best be described as semi-legal. By paying the players, slot machines were made illegal, and eventually banned in California. Charles Fey continued to produce his machines regardless.
He knew his machines were popular and that the end users were the ones using his inventions illegally. Why should he give up producing, when as far as he was concerned, they were legal if used correctly?
He continued to produce and sell his inventions, and was eventually arrested and fined.
It was never legal to produce or own slot machines again in California as long as Charles Fey was alive. Production was legal in other states and these producers often copied his machines and sold them to his clients.
I wonder what Charles Fey would be thinking of doing in the year 2000 with Internet gambling and online casinos. Are we missing out on the latest invention of the "Liberty Bell"?
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