Roulette, £70 Jackpot Juice Terminal Game

Roulette from Games Media playing guide.
Juice Roulette is a randomized roulette game with a spinning disk prior to the roulette wheel feature entry. It is a fairly unique concept, and the game info states that the roulette wheel at least, is random.
The concept of the game is simple enough, but the understanding of the repeats may be confusing so I'll explain that a little later on.
There are three stakes to choose from: 25p, 50p, and £1. They all have the same jackpot (£70) and same odds, the difference in the stakes being the value of the available chips is less.
On initially playing the game, the player is greeted with a disk with 20 spaces. 17 or 18 of those spaces will be blank, and 2 or 3 with have a cash value roulette chip on them. The value of these chips is dependent on the stake you are playing and how willing the machine is to pay out. I will write this guide with the focus being on 50p play and I'll bracket ( ) the information accordingly should it be different for other stakes.
Once you press start a bar will spin around the disk and stop. If it lands on a blank space, you will spin again using another credit. The chips can hold over to the next spin therefore increasing the chances of landing on a cash value. The value of the chips ranges in value from 10 (£1), up to £35 (£50 on £1 play).
Sometimes it can go through long periods without landing on a cash chip so be prepared for that as the disk is apparently random.
Once you land on a cash roulette chip, the game moves over to the roulette wheel. This offers the same odds and the same layout as the standard European roulette wheel. Here you can bet the value of your chip across the table including corners and columns.
If you are playing for the £70 jackpot plus a large repeat chance then you will have to bet accordingly as you will only have a maximum of 5 chances. After 5 roulette spins the game will collect any money you have so you'll need to get the high values as early as possible. Maybe go for a £9 to £18 win on the first spin. If you don't get it, you can always try again the next time you get a roulette chip.
If your chips allow it, you can actually bet more than the £70 (for example £2.50 on a number for £90), however the machine will show the highest win available as being £70. This is because the remainder will be carried over to the repeat pot, then doubled.
Juice Roulette is a randomized roulette game with a spinning disk prior to the roulette wheel feature entry. It is a fairly unique concept, and the game info states that the roulette wheel at least, is random.
The concept of the game is simple enough, but the understanding of the repeats may be confusing so I'll explain that a little later on.
There are three stakes to choose from: 25p, 50p, and £1. They all have the same jackpot (£70) and same odds, the difference in the stakes being the value of the available chips is less.
On initially playing the game, the player is greeted with a disk with 20 spaces. 17 or 18 of those spaces will be blank, and 2 or 3 with have a cash value roulette chip on them. The value of these chips is dependent on the stake you are playing and how willing the machine is to pay out. I will write this guide with the focus being on 50p play and I'll bracket ( ) the information accordingly should it be different for other stakes.
Once you press start a bar will spin around the disk and stop. If it lands on a blank space, you will spin again using another credit. The chips can hold over to the next spin therefore increasing the chances of landing on a cash value. The value of the chips ranges in value from 10 (£1), up to £35 (£50 on £1 play).
Sometimes it can go through long periods without landing on a cash chip so be prepared for that as the disk is apparently random.
Once you land on a cash roulette chip, the game moves over to the roulette wheel. This offers the same odds and the same layout as the standard European roulette wheel. Here you can bet the value of your chip across the table including corners and columns.
If you are playing for the £70 jackpot plus a large repeat chance then you will have to bet accordingly as you will only have a maximum of 5 chances. After 5 roulette spins the game will collect any money you have so you'll need to get the high values as early as possible. Maybe go for a £9 to £18 win on the first spin. If you don't get it, you can always try again the next time you get a roulette chip.
If your chips allow it, you can actually bet more than the £70 (for example £2.50 on a number for £90), however the machine will show the highest win available as being £70. This is because the remainder will be carried over to the repeat pot, then doubled.
Here is an example:
Bet £2.50 on number 36.
36 comes in paying £70 and playing the jackpot music.
You then are offered a repeat chance. Now the repeat chance here is actually for £40 not the £20. This is because you have a 50/50 chance of hitting the repeat, so the machine doubles the amount you can win. If you are lucky enough to hit the repeat, then you are taken back to the roulette wheel and given another chance with the value of the repeat, which in this case is £40.
You could get another £70 and another large repeat chance, giving you a bank of £140 plus another chance again. On the current versions you can only do this three times, I think up to a maximum of £210, however initially when they were released several years ago, the repeats could go on and on should your luck be in. I personally had a few £300 to £450 wins when I went all out for the large repeat chances.
In conclusion, the machine is OK although it does have a high potential of taking large amounts of money due to it's supposed random nature. Worth playing if you go for the big wins, otherwise it probably isn't worth it.
This game can also be found on Barcrests' Triple 7 and a couple of other terminals. The concept above is the same.
Bet £2.50 on number 36.
36 comes in paying £70 and playing the jackpot music.
You then are offered a repeat chance. Now the repeat chance here is actually for £40 not the £20. This is because you have a 50/50 chance of hitting the repeat, so the machine doubles the amount you can win. If you are lucky enough to hit the repeat, then you are taken back to the roulette wheel and given another chance with the value of the repeat, which in this case is £40.
You could get another £70 and another large repeat chance, giving you a bank of £140 plus another chance again. On the current versions you can only do this three times, I think up to a maximum of £210, however initially when they were released several years ago, the repeats could go on and on should your luck be in. I personally had a few £300 to £450 wins when I went all out for the large repeat chances.
In conclusion, the machine is OK although it does have a high potential of taking large amounts of money due to it's supposed random nature. Worth playing if you go for the big wins, otherwise it probably isn't worth it.
This game can also be found on Barcrests' Triple 7 and a couple of other terminals. The concept above is the same.