Okay, so there have
been one or two fruit machine
games on the Speccy. Eight
billion, in fact. Surely no new
game can add anything new to
this well-worn genre? But
Dizzy
Dice ain't no lemon - in fact
it's a peach. Though it wouldn't
win any prizes for style or
originality, it really hits the
jackpot on playability.
You start with ten points,
using up one for every game.
As the fruit, bells, wheels and
BAR signs rotate through the
four windows, you can win from
2 to 200 points. You can
usually hold the symbols about
half the time - though never
after a win, where you simply
gamble or collect. This feature
is rather more complicated
than on real machines. You can
choose one of five symbols,
each of which pays out a
different amount. Then the
wheel spins, and if your symbol
is picked out, you win some
more points. It's much more of
a gamble than on the real
thing, so this is recommended
only for small wins. Fortunately
two or four point wins spin
along fairly regularly, so you
can gamble on these while
bunging the big wins in the
bank.
If you're not on a winning
streak, you'll find certain
symbols lighting up at the
bottom of the screen as they
appear in the windows. They'll
only light up in a pre-set order,
but when you have all six,
lights start flashing and you
can play the Dice Game. Now
the fun really starts. This is a
sort of
Play Your Cards Right
with an ordinary die (or the
computer equivalent). The
Speccy chooses a random
number between 1 and 6, and
it's your job to guess whether
the next throw will be higher,
lower or the same. If you bet
correctly, you double the points
at stake, up to a maximum 200.
If not, you lose your stake.
Alternatively you can cop out at
any point and take the money.
You'll bet, though, won't you?
Yeah, course you will.
It's not exactly the most
ambitious game I've ever seen,
but that didn't stop me from
battering away at it when I
should've been doing
something else
(We noticed!
Ed). I doubt it's got real staying
power, but even so
Dizzy Dice
is a really fruity number at the
price. And it's got to be the
best one-armed bandit game
around, BAR none!
(Groan.
Ed).
| Ratings given by other magazines |
| |
7/10
| |
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| Info supplied by the SPOT*ON database |