Win a hunt in Slotout Wasteland
The Fallout game series is set in a post-apocalyptic world where nuclear bombs have turned society into a chaotic wasteland. Imagine Mad Max with more radiation and mutant creatures. Players take on the role of a Vault Dweller, armed with Pip-Boy and a dark sense of humor, as they navigate this desolate environment, fighting everything from giant cockroaches to power armored rogues. It’s a quirky, non-radioactive adventure where survival depends on your wits and a ton of bottle caps, which for some reason serve as the game’s primary currency.
Now imagine all of that in an alternate reality where everything is slightly different. Well, now we have GameBeat’s Slotout.
When the bombs dropped, the hard work began
In the Slotout base game, money and special money symbols may appear. This symbol shows the multiplier that can be applied to the bet amount and awarded as an instant win. The multiplier amount is only awarded if money or a special money symbol appears on the same spin as the bonus symbol.
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The slot’s bonus game starts with 3 or more bottle cap symbols. When this happens, all symbols on the reels are converted into money, special money, or blank symbols for the hold and win mechanic.
During the slot hold and win bonus feature, you are given three spins that can add extra money or special money symbols to the reels. If you manage, you’ll be reset three spins. When a new currency or special currency symbol appears, all values currently on the reels are added to the global multiplier before a new multiplier for the new symbol is revealed. The round ends when you spin three times in a row without adding another symbol to the reels.
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Is Slotout similar to the Spider-Man meme?
Slotout offers multipliers of up to 5,000x, giving you the chance to win up to $200,000 when you bet the maximum amount of $40 per spin. However, bets start at $0.20 per spin. The slot has medium volatility and offers an RTP of 96.54%.
I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a more blatant plagiarism of an existing IP to create a slot game. I have a hard time understanding GameBeat’s shamelessness in making Slotout. That would be like daring to try to get Bethesda to send a cease-and-desist letter. I would be more upset if the slots weren’t as good as they are now. But I wish Bethesda would seize the opportunity and keep the shithouse going by incorporating some sort of playable free-money version of the slot into the next Fallout game without GameBeat’s permission. Although it is difficult to evaluate this part, I would like to evaluate it as objectively as possible and give it a 9 out of 10. On the scale of the shithouse, it’s 11 points!
If you want to find a few slots from GameBeat that aren’t outright plagiarism, I recommend trying Frog Space Program and STOLBIK777.