Red Tiger Gaming launched a psychedelic 5×4 slot with 30 paylines inspired and based on the iconic Mad Hatter Tea Party. Not only will you find all the characters from the famous story on the reels in the higher and lower-paying symbols, but it also comes with a superb maximum win potential of 3333x the stake but also a couple of Progressive Jackpots to keep you at the tea party.
The Wild Hatter is a high volatility slot and is probably more suitable for high rollers rather than beginners. It’s a vibrant title with magnificent designs and graphics, immersive gameplay and brilliant winning options and exciting features, which include spins galore, Multipliers and a Jackpot Scatter
Wild Hatter Symbols
The Mad Hatter is the games Wild symbol, and look out for the Cheshire Cat. He is also an essential character since he forms the highest paying combinations. Other symbols on the reels include a pocket watch, a chess piece, a teapot, and five Royals. The Mad Hatter is the games Wild, and the Jackpot Scatter is the symbol with gold writing and psychedelic background.
The Wild Hatter Bonus Feature
Getting Curiouser and Curiouser then land a Wild to get the Re-spins started, and before your last re-spin, the game selects a symbol randomly, which becomes the winning symbol. After the Re-Spins, players may land some more endearing characters. When they do, you receive another re-spin and the winning Multiplier, which increases by one if you land another Wild during the re-spins, the winning symbol upgrades to one of a higher value.
Wild Progressive Jackpots
The Wild Hatter slot is part of the Red Tigers Progressive Jackpot network. Land three Jackpot Scatters, and you stand a chance of claiming one of the Jackpots. The hourly and Daily Jackpots are time-sensitive and will only be won by one lucky player at their allotted times, whereas the Mega Jackpot keeps increasing in value until it gets won.
Accept the invitation and let Red Tiger Gaming take you down the rabbit hole to the wildest tea party ever!
Like clockwork! I can’t stop winning.. or at least breaking even. No house edge. Roll up, roll up!
Pachinko is a mechanical gambling game, which originated in Japan in the years following World War II and has since developed into an industry with an annual turnover of ¥21.5 trillion, or $200 billion. Indeed, Japan is home to tens of thousands of pachinko parlours, which are largely the preserve of the Korean Japanese, who were excluded from the traditional workforce in the post-war years.
Pachinko is akin to pinball, insofar as it involves launching steel ball bearings into the machine, but is played vertically, rather than horizontally. The word pachinko is the diminutive form of the Japanese word ‘pachin’, which describes the natural clicking sound the machine make. Players insert money, push the so-called ‘tamakashi button’ to release a fixed number of balls into the upper ball tray and gently rotate a handle to start firing them into the machine.
The idea is that as many balls as possible negotiate the pin maze and drop into the main prize hole, a.k.a. the ‘gate’, in the middle of the field of play. Too little, or too much, pressure on the handle may result in balls missing the field of play altogether and only a small percentage of those that do make it – perhaps 6% or 7%, on average – will enter the gate. Nevertheless, each ball that does enter the gate wins additional balls, plus a spin of the reels, which provides an opportunity to hit a bonus, including the jackpot. At the end of a playing session, winnings, in the form of balls, are tallied by a member of staff, who creates a receipt that can be redeemed, for prizes large and small, at the prize counter.
“We have now finished the authentication process, photos of every chip, video of the counting ( 2,222 ).
The chips are on display at Spinettis, will be Monday-Wednesday the 27-29th.
I will remove the chips and tokens on Thursday, and, start my Guinness display with the MoGH.
My goal is to finish all the paperwork by the end of the week.
After submission, I wait 12 weeks for my approval ( hopefully ).
Should be a formality, we did everything exactly like last year.
Thanks again for your continued support, I can’t thank you enough.
Stay safe and healthy
Gregg”
1st October Update:
![](https://hotchip.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/largest-collection-of-casino-chips-gregg-fisher-2222-1024x924.png)
For those unable to make it (not uncommon in the current climate!) check out this video tour of the Museum of Gaming History’s Exhibitions at Spinettis: