5 Coin Frenzy Jackpots

Wukong Wealth, Tiger Wealth and Eight Phoenix

Similar Games:

Fu Blossom Blessings and Fu Blossom Prosperity, Wu Wang Zhe (because you pay for each spin in the feature)

Risk Scale:

Yellow (60x your bet on the high end)

Minimum Play:

Notice those coins in the red envelopes next to where it has “good luck”? For a play, you need at least three out of five envelopes filled with coins. Then there’s another wrinkle I’ll explain below.

Other:

This is another rare game where you pay for your “bonus” spins.

This is an older-looking advantage game that pros sometimes miss, probably in part because it looks like an older-model machine. But a play is simple to spot:

Notice those two coins in the red envelopes next to where it has “good luck”? For a play, you need at least three out of five envelopes filled with coins. The Tiger Wealth example above has two, and some looser grinders will play that, but having at least three is the consensus.

Something like this would be ideal:

This game pays both the standard left to right and right to left. That doesn’t matter a whole lot on our end, but you don’t often see that.

For Eight Phoenix, once you get five coins, the reels expand for five spins, but you still need to pay for those spins (much like with Fu Blossom Blessings/Prosperity). For that reason, finding a machine in the middle of a bonus is great for however many spins are left in the bonus.

You can also trigger a separate bonus, at least eight free spins but sometimes more, with golden eight symbols. That bonus can’t be planned for; however, you do have a better chance of triggering it in the original bonus because the reels are taller and have more room to catch these secondary bonus symbols. You can think of it like Hexbreaker-style games, where you have more potential in general with taller reels.

For Wukong Wealth and Tiger Wealth, instead of reel expansion, you get wilds added to each of your five spins, ranging from one to 15 per spin. You also have to pay for each of the five spins in this bonus, so at rare times you find a play mid-bonus and then just pay for those spins. You can also trigger that aforementioned secondary bonus, but instead of golden eight symbols, it’s golden tigers and golden monkeys.

There’s also a separate feature for all three games where you pick through a few envelopes and usually win a couple of minis and other credits. This happens randomly.

There’s a lot going on with the various bonus features, but it’s a simple game to check.

Here’s my video breakdown of the game, where I only had one uneventful spin but was able to go over some concepts: