Swedish online casino games programmer Play’n Go has followed up its recent launching of the holiday-themed Easter Eggs movie slot with premiering its newest five-reel Touch innovation complete using an eye-popping three-dimensional element.
Ancient artefacts:
The Vaxjo-based company used a formal Thursday press release to detail that Contact is themed around the early Mayan civilization of Central America and as such features true-to-life reel symbols including masks as well as stone-carved representations of reptiles, falcons and snakes.
Play‘n Go further stated that its latest online casino launching, which includes a 96 percent return-to-player ratio, uses the exact same grid-based layout as has proven so popular because of its earlier Gemix and Sweet Alchemy titles. However, unlike these temptations, the high-volatility Contact sees fitting clusters remain on its seven-level playfield while all the other symbols are lost in order to allow for the production of additional and even bigger winning collections.
The programmer also declared that video slot aficionados can activate Contact’s bonus game by filling any column all the way to the very best with symbols that are winning. Players start this extra holding using a trio of casino twists while winning clusters remain on the grid during in hopes of assisting opponents to hit the maximum quintuple multipliers or access the title’s much more lucrative Super Bonus Round.
Angled aspect:
Finally, Play‘n Move hypothesized its mobile-friendly Touch plays ‘only too in portrait mode as it does at the more traditional landscape mode’ and supplies a three-dimensional touch via the utilization of an angled camera perspective.
According to Play‘n Go’s press release…
“As the first fully three-dimensional grid slot, Touch provides a truly immersive visual experience to match the innovative gameplay. The three-dimensional visuals allowed us to be very inventive with camera angles, which provides this game an epic sense and provides a new dimension to some player’s session not researched in our names. ”