It was my turn. If I was to pluck this bird, my opponent would have to make a mistake. Not likely, but still, the only mistake-proof chicken I knew of involved a full head of garlic. I decided that if the solid play of the first contestant didn't work, and the reckless play of the second failed to throw the chicken off its game, maybe I could psych the chicken out. 

The chicken made its move, and I took center square. Then I moved a step to my left, and stared directly into the booth. The chicken didn't play right away. It clawed the bottom of the booth. It pecked at the straw. It looked directly at me, cocking its head first one way, then the other. 

Then it marked the bottom left square, and I was in the same position as the woman found herself earlier. I had to take center left for the block, and hope the chicken then missed on my chance to win at center right. 

I returned to staredown position. The chicken strutted, pecked, eyed me with head cocked one way, then the other, then back again. It started toward its panel, looked back at me once more, then pecked the O at center right, dashing my hopes. 

We played out the draw, and I had to admit this was one tough bird. I gave it my best shot, but you know my prize. 



No fall gaming show would be complete without new multiline video games from WMS--that's were the company has really made its reputation, with games including Reel 'Em In, Off the Charts, Cash Crop, Winning Bid, Hollywood Squares and the Monopoly series. This year's new games include the pirate-themed X Marks the Spot; Toast of the Town, where the bonus round asks the player to find the best champagne offered by a snooty French waiter, and Roll Credits, in which players collect bonuses by chosing among an unlikely looking group of credits to review strange-sounding films. 

Name-brand games include Ms. Pac-Man, following up on the success of the Pac-Man slots earlier this year, a new Hollywood Squares game called The Center Square, and new Monopoly games called Free Parking and Hot Properties. I spent the most time with Free Parking, which features three bonus rounds. In the Railroad Crossing bonus, players touch a symbol on the main screen to reveal a bonus. The Parking Meter bonus brings five free spins, and when coins appear on the reels to feed the meters, bonuses multiply. The Free Parking bonus goes to a second screen, where players choose parking spaces. Cars then pull into the lot, and the fancier the cars that park in the chosen spaces, the bigger the bonus. 
Tiger 1
home

gamble1
gamble2
gamble3
gamble4
gamble5
gamble6
gamble7

Tiger 2
gamble8
gamble9
gamble10
gamble11
gamble12

Tiger 3
gamble13
gamble14
gamble15

Casino and other Advertisers
Online Casino >>
Atlanta Lawyers
>>
Online Casinos >>
Dallas Lawyers
>>
High Roller Online Casinos >>

Increase your page popularity >>

Sponsored in part by:Online Poker

best online casinos