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Cash Falls
Huo Zhu, Pirate’s Trove, Island Bounty, Outback Fortune
Similar Games:
Ultimate Fire Link Cash Falls
Risk Scale:
Green (usually a few spins)
Minimum Play:
A column adding up to around four times your bet and one coin away from completion. Look for a bright blue border surrounding a column, indicating it’s one away from completion. Then add that column up to make sure it’s 4x your bet.
Other:
You’ll see this game in many casinos, and though the advantage isn’t massive, good plays will add up over time.
There are a few different themes. You’re on a pirate ship! You’re frolicking with dingos! But it’s the same game … not to be confused with Ultimate Fire Link Cash Falls, which plays slightly differently.
Let’s make this fun and start with a Halley’s Comet-level find, because generally it’s a game that offers a small advantage rather than a potential life-changer:
If you slot for the rest of your life, you might never find a Cash Falls play this ridiculous. Generally, you want around four times your bet with a column being one coin away from completion. Once a column is filled with coins, you’re awarded whatever’s in that column.
So let’s do some quick math in the example above. It’s a 5-cent denomination with a bet of 500. It’s the classic casino ploy of making things more confusing than it has to be, but that translates to a $25 bet. If you touch the “500” with your finger, that will change to “$25” to more clearly show you what you’re wagering.
Just on column five, we have $11,466 up for grabs, or almost 460 times our bet! Remember, we’re looking for about four times our bet for it to be profitable long term, and some people will go as low as 3.5 times the bet. Not only that, but we have three chances (those small coins directly below the column) to get that win.
For those curious, I missed all three spins and wanted to puke. But you can’t afford to be results-oriented in the slot game; you just need to move on and hope you can make it count the next time you find an all-world play like that.
Below are some more realistic examples of what you’ll likely find out there day-to-day in the slot jungle:
Is this good? One column is one away from being completed and we can tell that quickly; the first column is outlined in a blue rectangle. It’s a 1-cent denom and a 250 bet ($2.50). The three big coins in that column add up to 1000 or $10. I’m no Pythagoras, but that’s four times our bet on the nose, so it’s a play. And we know it’s a play for at least three spins, because three small coins are below the 625 big coin.
This is an easy game to check. If we go through each denom — achieved by clicking on the 1-cent square in the bottom right corner — a column one coin away from being completed is highlighted with a blue border around the bet, as seen below around the 250 in this case:
If we don’t see any bets with a blue border, we know we don’t need to do any further investigating to see if a column one away adds up to four times our bet or greater. Yes, there are cases where chasing two-away columns can be profitable if the coins are large enough, but in the interest of keeping things simple, I won’t explore that here.
It’s a simple, low-risk, often underchecked game that usually won’t net you much unless you get lucky and hit an unplanned bonus. But hey, it offers an advantage at the right numbers, so it’s worth including in your routine.
You sometimes also find two columns one coin away. Below, column one is in play for one spin and column four is a play for three spins. You also have an outside chance of filling column five, which is two coins away, but we won’t overcomplicate this blurb with more info than is needed.
Bottom line, you’ll find the above example all the time and it’s easy to check. Here are my videos to further explain things: