If you’re a player who has ever desired to “Enjoy the feeling of being excessively wealthy” or “acquire mansions, yachts, and private jets to show your power,” Red Tiger may have the spot you’re searching for. Dream Destiny is a Max Win Gaming-produced slot machine with an emphasis on high-end consumer goods purchased with real money. But it won’t carry your entire load by itself. A strong dosage of creative thinking is required to get the most out of this fantasy, and because to its restricted possibilities, the definition of “extremely wealthy” must be adjusted.
There are 5 reels and 20 paylines in this game, and players spin them while perched on the stone steps of a sleek, contemporary home with a view worth a million euros. Fly whips of the Porsche/Ferrari sort sit next to the gaming grid, while topiary shaped like a cash sign stands to the left. It’s the kind of spot that’s great for both relaxing after a hard day of saving up the money to pay for it and taking Instagram photos that will make your followers green with envy.
Assume a 3 out of 5 volatility in your mathematical model if you dare challenge the dream machine. The default RTP has been recorded at 95.88% during simulated spins, but the hit rate of 4 out of 5 is somewhat higher. In a slot machine with a rich theme, the maximum payout is the only number that matters. Dream Destiny fails to provide in this regard. More on that to come, but for now, know that it probably won’t be enough to cover your dream house or supercar. Perhaps some designer sneakers and a purse for the lady.
Three or more identical symbols from the leftmost reel form a winning combination. The four gemstone-adorned suits of playing cards (clubs, diamonds, hearts, and spades) are only one example of many symbols of affluence. The next best paid tile has a trophy wife type, followed by cigars and liquor, pearls in an oyster shell, a bag full of cash, and finally a glazed-eyed woman who appears to be overwhelmed by the show of wealth. A win for five of a kind with any of the four highest-paying symbols is worth between 7.5 and 30 times the wager.
The VIP Bank credit card and the sleek Larry Laffer lookalike who only cares about living it up both serve as wild symbols throughout the game. They may both be used in place of other symbols to help you win, and they’re worth 2, 10, or 30 times your stake for 3, 4, or 5 of them on a payline, respectively.
Featured Slots in Dream Destiny
Each spin of the Dream Wheel has the potential to activate one of four bonus features and award a multiplier. While we refer to these as “multipliers,” the most prevalent type is an x1 multiplier, which has a negligible effect on the outcome of most spins. Free games, random wilds, stacked reels, and mystery symbols are the four add-ons;
For the current play, the Private Jet feature will fly a jet over the grid and deposit high-paying symbols onto the reels at random.
The Champagne Feature can turn anywhere from two to five reels into high-paying stacked symbols for the current spin.
Credit card wilds may be placed anywhere on the grid thanks to the Credit Card function.
Finally, if you land on Free Spins while spinning, you’ll receive 10 more spins or a continuation of the feature. Disappointingly, nothing about the rules for free spins differs from the rules for spins in the standard game.
Slots and the Fate of Dreams
Dream Destiny is intentionally tongue in cheek. The level of seriousness or trolling in Dream Destiny’s posts varies. In the former case, it risks becoming a caricature of itself. Sure, it’s all in good fun and hopeful thinking, but Dream Destiny may have been more enjoyable if it hadn’t taken itself so seriously while showing off its wealth.
The Destiny Wheel is a gimmick since most of the time all it does is spit out worthless x1 multipliers. Honestly, I don’t see the point of being so teased. If you receive a greater multiplier, like x5, sometimes and a good line win, that’s fine. When they finally decide to activate, the other features are, too. One of the game’s biggest letdowns is that getting a full line of five trophy wife icons, with the multiplier increased to x5, only pays out 150 times the wager. If you max out this credit card, you stand to win 1,539 times your initial wager. While that’s preferable to shelling out the entire retail price for a counterfeit Rolex, the top prize still falls short of the game’s lofty expectations.
There isn’t nearly enough money being wagered or spent for this to be considered a slot machine based on wealth. If the developers had dialed back the cheese, increased the maximum win, and relaxed the multipliers on the wheel, Dream Destiny could have been more enjoyable. However, they didn’t, and the result is a mean game that is all show and little substance.