Please enjoy my latest slot machine. The title is Spanish for 'Let's go to Las Vegas.' It was inspired by the song of the same name by Los Tigres del North, and is the best song ever in Spanglish!
The game features two bonus rounds as follows:
- Casino Implosion: Pick one of five casinos to implode, revealing a prize. This was mathematically easy but graphically very difficult to do.
- Ticket Bonus: This bonus features eight free spin with 'sticky wilds.' This means that any wilds stay in place for all remaining spins in the bonus. A separate pay table and reel stripping are used. A game with a similar bonus is Miss Kitty.
The game return is 97%. To see how the game is designed please see my par sheet (PDF) for the game.
I hope you'll enjoy the game. It took literally years from design to completion to create. Sorry there isn't any sound.
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- Math by the Wizard
- JavaScript by JB
- Artwork by TicTabs
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As far as I know, the vast majority of shoe games in Vegas stand on soft 17. Usually the dealer will hit a soft 17 in single-deck games and double deck can go either way. I try to explain why card counting words in my page on card counting.
For family living the nicest areas are indeed Henderson and Summerlin. Personally I live in a master planned community called Peccole Ranch, which borders Summerlin. In my opinion the west side, where I live, is better because:
- It has an Orange County, California, look and feel to while much of Henderson looks like it was made from a cookie cutter.
- The west side is higher in elevation and thus cooler in summer.
- Henderson suffers from the noise of landing airplanes.
- The west side is right next to the mountains, which offer outstanding hiking and climbing.
- The future growth of the west side seems to be better planned.
If you ask someone from Henderson they will claim Henderson has less traffic, but there are two sides to that issue, and I think the west side is better in that area too. I’m sure I will hear from somebody from Henderson over this, and am happy to print a rebuttal in the future, because I believe in presenting both sides.
The worst parts of Vegas are around downtown, gradually getting better as you move further away. For something in the middle there is lots of growth on the south side of town along the I-15 and the north side along the U.S. 95.
In my opinion New Years in Vegas is overrated. If you want to welcome the new-year standing shoulder to shoulder with thousands of other people on the Strip then you will succeed. However inside the casinos about the only difference is people wear silly hats. We locals tend to go nowhere near the Strip on December 31. I’m not an expert on the party scene but I suspect you can find that any time.
I'm letting my webmaster Michael Bluejay answer this one, since he has the #1 website on saving electricity, at least according to Google. Here is what he says.
You're wondering about the 'extreme absence' of solar panels in Las Vegas? What part of the planet do you inhabit where solar panels are in such abundance that you notice the 'extreme absence' of them when you visit Las Vegas? I can't remember the last time I saw a solar panel, in or out of Las Vegas.
Okay, so there are three parties who could use solar panels: homeowners, businesses, and utility companies. Homeowners haven’t installed solar panels in droves because the panels and batteries aren’t cheap, and neither is installation or maintenance. Payback time for photovoltaics is maybe 12 years. It's just not very attractive economically to most people. Businesses could afford the investment, and as soon as they think they'll save money by doing so I imagine they will. Actually, it's very possible that some casinos already use solar energy, but I don't know since I don't make it a habit of checking the rooftops of the casinos, and apparently neither do you. I do know that many area schools have solar panels or are slated to get them.
As for utility companies, and they are investing in solar in a big way. There's the Clark Photovoltaic System at the Clark Generating Station, a 3.1 megawatt facility being built as we speak, and a 70-megawatt solar plant being built near Boulder City, which will be the third-largest in the world. And it will be one of only nine that exist on the whole planet. There's also Daystar1, a smaller facility right next to UNLV, about a mile and a half from the Strip. Also, if I remember right, I saw some traffic signs or streetlights in Vegas with little photovoltaic panels on top, presumably storing the energy in a battery to light the sign/light at night.
Everyone focuses on energy production, but the plain truth of the matter is that we could lessen our environmental impact a lot more and a lot easier through energy conservation. With global oil production declining (we've used half of the oil that exists on the planet), the question everyone's asking is, 'How can we find other ways to generate energy so we can keep using ridiculous amounts of it?' The question we should be asking is, 'How can we save energy so we don't have to generate so much of it in the first place?' For some answers to that question, see my site on saving electricity.
I asked my father this question since he has a Ph.D. in physics and also a solar panel on his house. Here is what he said,
It would help, but the economics might not justify it. Probably less than 25% of heat enters houses through the roof. The reflectivity of the mirrors would probably degrade to 60% or less as they age and get dirty. It makes a lot more sense to use that space for water heaters or solar electric panels. On a sunny day, my roof panels provide enough power to run both the A/C and the pool pump, which are my biggest power eaters. When one or both are off, my meter runs backwards. The pool heater panels had the pool temp up to 90 degrees last week. I had to cut back on the pumping time.
Congratulations! I hope you’ll use Social Security’s popular baby name lists, which I started, to avoid the most popular names.
I didn’t want to embarrass the casinos at the bottom of my list, because my methodology was not the most scientific. However, I suppose I can offer some praise for the top three. Here they are:
- Mandalay Bay
- Planet Hollywood
- Paris
I have no reason to doubt there is a million dollars under that case. Their older, and much better, display clearly had one million in the form of 100 $10,000 bills. For those unfamiliar with them, $10,000 bills are extremely rare and sell for about ten times that at auction. Another reason I don't doubt they have a million dollars on the premises is every Nevada casino has to have sufficient cash to do business, and I imagine the Nevada Gaming Control Board lets Binion's count the money in that display, as a last resort. Ironically, not having sufficient cash on hand was the reason Binion's was closed down in 2004 (source).
To get back to your question, it would take 10,000 $100 bills to make a million dollars. Given that a bill is 6' long and 2.625' high, and a 100-bill stack is about 1/2' high, a million dollars would occupy 787.5 cubic inches only. That is just 46% of a cubic foot. You could fit a million dollars in $100 bills in a briefcase easily. So clearly there are some non-$100 bills in that case.
Discussion about this in my forum turned up an article with the specifics, Recurring currency from the Aug. 22, 2008 Las Vegas Review Journal. It says that the display has 42,000 $1 bills, 34,400 $20 bills, and 2,700 $100 bills.
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This question was raised and discussed in the forum of my companion site Wizard of Vegas.