That's one of the most interesting malfunctions I've heard of. The machine
must have had a creative moment to display a payoff that doesn't exist on the
paytable.
Was this machine connected to a Wide Area Progressive? If not, someone must
have tampered with the software in order to display that "jackpot." Perhaps
someone (slot tech?) in cahoots with the player, hoping for a large cash
settlement to be split afterwards?
Please keep us up to date on this. Much better than, "The jackpot symbols
SEEMED to be lined up!"
Thanks,
Brian
ยทยทยท
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In a message dated 10/21/2007 9:13:02 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
vpdeuces@yahoo.com writes:
The machine locked up after a spin and the screen
indicated that he'd hit a jackpot of almost $1.6 million. It was a
nickel machine and clearly marked with a maximum payout of $2,500,
along with the standard "Machine malfunction voids all pays and
plays."
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