Classic slot machines never go out of style at Colorado casinos

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

SLOTS

By John Grochowski

It happens when players walk down the aisles of casino slot floors every day. A hot new game catches your eye. You give it a try – and you like it. You like the game play, you like the bonus rounds, maybe you have a couple of pretty good wins. You seek out the game each time you go to the casino. You become old friends.

And then one day it’s gone, replaced by some flashy new slot with new bells and whistles. But some slot machines transcend that. They don’t disappear in a few months, or even a few years. There’s staying power in titles like Double Diamond, Jackpot Party, Blazing 7s, games that keep their loyal following year after year after year. These are the ever-lasting slots, the games that never go out of style:

Double Diamond, IGT:

With its classic, elegant look, its diamond symbols and its jackpot multiplier feature, the three-reel Double Diamond slot machine has been with us for nearly two decades since its late 1989 introduction.

The format seems simple now, but it’s led to a whole family of games. The Double Diamond symbol doubles winning combinations. Get a Double Diamond and two single bars, and you get twice the payoff of three single bars. Make it two Double Diamonds and a single bar, and you double the payoff twice – you get four times the payoff for three bars. And three Double Diamonds, well, that’s good for the machine’s top jackpot.

Blazing 7s, Bally:

Talk about lasting popularity. Blazing 7s has been with us since the 1970s. It was developed as a rapid-hit jackpot game, with 7s symbols on fiery backgrounds and a volatility that has proved so appealing to players that Blazing 7s in various incarnations has remained a Bally staple through electro-mechanical games, to reel-stepper slots with microprocessers, to today’s video slots.

Jackpots come fast and furious on Blazing 7s, originally designed as a dollar progressive three-reel game. The top jackpot for three Blazing 7 symbols starts at $1,000, and the high frequency of payoffs means the jackpot usually hits before it reaches the $1,200 threshold that requires IRS paperwork. That’s intentional – designers thought about that very issue as they worked on the math for the game.

Jackpot Party, WMS:

Find a game platform WMS has used, and you’ll find a version of Jackpot Party. There’s just something about the bonus round that says “party time!”

The player picks gift boxes to tally up bonuses until a package containing a “pooper” ends the round. I’ve rolled up thousands of credits, picking winner after winner. And I’ve been crushed when the first box picked was some old party pooper, putting a rapid end to my fun with minimum credits.

Reel ’em In!, WMS:

The game that turned Americans on to the possibilities of five-reel video slots with bonus rounds was the original Reel ’em In! The bonus round was simple – the video screen changed to a scene of fishermen in boats, and the player touched the screen to select one to drop a line in the water. After a frenzy of splashing water, the angler would reel in the catch – the bigger the fish, the bigger the bonus. Simple enough, but enduring.

~ John Grochowski has covered the casino industry for 15 years in newspapers and magazines, and is the author of six books on casino games. Readers can email him at casinoanswerman@casinoanswerman.com.

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