Rol A Top Slot Machine Twilight Zone
Features of the Twilight Zone Slots Machine
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The gaming console designed for this slot game is very simple. Every option is clearly displayed on your screen so that you can select any with ease. Multi-way bets are supported by the slot machine. 125 credits is the highest bet that you’re allowed to place. The smallest amount you can wager in coin denominations is one cent, and each spin can reward you with a total prize of $1.25. Players cannot bet on paylines when using the multi-play feature. Twilight Zone is one of the slot machines that uses the 243 ways to win system, and players will find that their betting options will increase by more than 10 times. You can bet on as many paylines as you like with the multi-play feature, allowing you to play 25, 50, or 100 lines games.
Bonus Features
- Directed by Robert Florey. With Rod Serling, Everett Sloane, Vivi Janiss, William Kendis. A middle-aged man catches gambling fever from a slot machine that he believes is calling his name.
- Twilight Zone is a slots game from International Gaming Technology ( IGT). This is a progressive video slots game that is presented in vibrant 3D visuals. The game, as the name suggests, is based on the hit TV show of the 1950s and 1960s, the Twilight Zone.
There are two major bonus features in Twilight Zone – the Bonus Zone and the Future Photo Bonus. The latter can be activated when three camera symbols appear on reels number one, two and three on your active paylines. You are required to choose one of the symbols on your screen in efforts to win award which could range between 25 and hundred credits. These credits are then multiplied with the initial bet to present you with potentially huge winnings.
The Bonus Zone round can be activated when three orb icons land on reels number one, two and three on your active paylines. One of the icons must be selected if you are to win free spins. This feature is also a sort of gateway to other rounds like Dimension Bonus and Free Spin Zone. Both features have the potential to reward you handsomely. The Twilight Zone slot game is connected to the Mega Jackpot bonus which can be activated when five Twilight Zone symbols appear on the 25th payline. Players must ensure that they have wagered the maximum bet if they are to claim this bonus. The scatter icon in this game is the eye. It provides an additional bonus of almost 600 credits if more than two of them appear on your active paylines.
Rod Serling In Front Of A 50c Rol-A-Top |
With my profession and passion in vintage slot machines I’m always watching for slot machines in the background of old movies and shows. Typically westerns will have some slot machines situated in a saloon and typically used as background props. Gangster movies from the 30’s and 40’s will show slots in bar scenes, etc. The classic Oceans 11 with Frank Sinatra shows lots of them in each casino! However, I don’t recall the slot machine(s) ever playing a leading role in a show, until The Twilight Zone.
Rol A Top Slot Machine Twilight Zone
The ever cool Rod Serling starts out the show by giving us a brief synopsis of what we are in for;
“Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Gibbs, three days and two nights, all expenses paid, at a Las Vegas hotel, won by virtue of Mrs. Gibbs' knack with a phrase. But unbeknownst to either Mr. or Mrs. Gibbs is the fact that there's a prize in their package neither expected nor bargained for. In just a moment, one of them will succumb to an illness worse than any virus can produce, a most inoperative, deadly, life-shattering affliction known as 'The Fever'.
As we find out, “The Fever” is Franklin’s sudden addiction to a slot machine after initially not wanting anything to do with them. While the premise is entertaining the show gets a little goofy towards the end. However, as a slot machine historian – looking at all the slot machines in the casino is truly fascinating and also raises questions.
While I’m not old enough to have visited Vegas in the early 1960’s my research and period photos have given me a darn good idea of what kind of machines were operating in the casinos during that time. Suffice to say, the star machine in the show (and killer), the Watling Rol-A-Top, was not at all a standard machine used then, especially by casino’s!
After stopping and starting the Twilight Zone DVD a few times I was able to identify all of the machines in the casino set. There is quite an eclectic collection of machines dating from the early 1930’s to the late 1940’s. The first machine that got my attention other than the murdering Rol-A-Top was a really rare AC Multibell. Those rarely come up for sale today and are very unique. A mix of Mills Black Cherry and Golden Falls machines can be seen lined up a few times. A Mills Extraordinary and Mills High Top machines are also in the room. Another interesting machine is a Mills jackpot revamp sitting off the side in a number of scenes. Watling Rol-A-Top’s in various forms are sprinkled in the background as well.
The primary Rol-A-Top that somehow follows Mr. Gibbs to his room is actually quite rare. By rare I don’t mean the flashing bulb at the top that covers the escalator either – ha ha. The Rol-A-Top that figures out how to belch out “Franklin” throughout the show appears to be a $1 Vender Front. I’ve had a number of rare Rol-A-Top machines but I’m actually not aware of real $ Rol-A-Top machines. During the show Mr. Gibbs is dropping them in and he also screams at the end of the show after knocking over the machine “Give me back my dollar”. I’m guessing that this machine could have been modified by an operator before the police confiscated it. By accepting dollars, I’m sure the escalator was modified or even removed, which is possibly why the white lens was placed over the top as well. The machine could be a real half dollar and the show simply implied it was a dollar – silver halves and dollars do look similar from a distance.
Regardless if it’s a 50c or $ machine it is quite odd that a large denomination machine has the mint vending columns on it. It’s possible that this machine was modified somehow for the show or the mechanism was switched out. I’m sure the shows director or prop department did not even know the machine originally vended mints. After finding some cool software on my computer I was able to freeze a scene from the shows trailer (image above). Mr. Serling is standing in front of a similar but different Rol-A-Top. This one is also a rare 50c machine with the escalator window covered, but it is not a vender front. I also have a shot of Franklin standing in front of the Rol-A-Top above as well.
A book titled The Twilight Zone Companion by Marc Scott Zicree has a brief background history of this show, which is really fascinating. In the 1960’s, slot machines were illegal to own in California. So, the only way to get a bunch of machines was to contact the police department where a number of them were impounded. For the filming of the show the police supplied all of the machines and kept an officer on set the entire time – apparently to make sure no one appropriated one of them. This behind the scenes trivia explains why the casino set has such an assortment of different machines not likely found in a real casino! It also explains why so many slot machines are hard to find today, with the police snatching them up. See my previous blog of where some of those machines ended up after the police snached them.