£8.495
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Floating Dragon

Floating Dragon

RRP: £16.99
Price: £8.495
£8.495 FREE Shipping

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Description

New players get 100% bonus up to 1 BTC + 100 free spins. To get the bonus, you must place a deposit of at least: USDT 20 / BTC 0.0006 / BCH 0.11 / DOGE 200 / ETH 0.01 / LTC 0.27 / XRP 40 / ADA 33 / BNB 0.051 / TRX 200 / BUSD 20. Talking about the maximum possible win from the landing symbols, it is worth mentioning that the Floating Ship can bring you 200x the initial bet. Such a generous multiplier appears when five Ship symbols take their positions on the pay lines. But it is not a limit of the game, and more juicy rewards are waiting for you. This process continues until you either fill the entire screen with coins, or until you fail to hit a new coin in three consecutive re-spins. Free Spins

The bonus and respective winnings must be wagered 40 times granted bonus amount before the funds can be withdrawn. Only wagers made with the bonus money will contribute towards the wagering requirement. Wagers made with real money will not count towards the wagering requirement.

High Flying Wins

There are money symbols that have a value of 1x, 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, 6x, 7x, 8x, 9x, 10x, 11x, 12x, 14x, 16x, 18x, 20x, 22x, 25x, 30x, 50x, 100x, 200x, 300x, 500x, 1,000x, or 2,000x your total bet. The challenge, sponsored by NASA’s Balloon Program Office (BPO) at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility and managed by the National Institute of Aerospace, was developed to provide increased opportunities for academic research institutions to contribute to the NASA Science Mission Directorate’s (SMD) mission. The Floating Dragon – Dragon Boat Festival slot is an excellent sequel to the popular Floating Dragon slot. It comes with the usual gorgeous visuals and animations, as well as numerous special features to help you make wins. There’s plenty to enjoy here and lots of great winning potential too.

The maximum win amount from free spins is USDT 150 / BTC 0.0045 / BCH 0.83 / DOGE 1,500 / ETH 0.075 / LTC 2 / XRP 300 / ADA 247.5 / BNB 0.38 / TRX 1,500 / BUSD 150. Tabby Smithfield: the last descendant of the town's founding families, Tabby is a 13-year-old boy with various psychic abilities similar to those possessed by Patsy McCloud; after their discovery of the powers they share, Patsy and Tabby form a close bond. Though born into wealth and privilege, Tabby has spent most of his life moving from city to city with his father, Clark Smithfield, whose alcoholism and inability to hold down a steady job have left Tabby without much stability in his life. Tabby's mother was killed in a car accident when he was six years old. Aside from utilizing a few too many Stephen King clichés (a psychically endowed teenager in particular), Straub is guilty of impaired judgement. Excess is fine, but passages like the climactic one in which the protagonists engage in a group sing-a-long of “When the Red, Red Robin Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin’ Along” to defeat the dragon are plain ridiculous (a fact not leavened at all by Straub’s claim that it was supposed to be silly), and accomplish nothing outside of dragging down an already top-heavy narrative.The fish symbols double as money icons, offering a boosted monetary value of between 2x and 10,000x your bet for larger wins.

Graham Williams: a novelist and screenwriter whose career was destroyed when he was labeled a Communist sympathizer for refusing to testify before the House Unamerican Activities Committee. Born and raised in Hampstead, Williams had his first brush with the sinister forces plaguing the town as a young man, when he discovered the identity of a serial killer, Bates Krell, responsible for the deaths of several local women, and later killed the man during a violent confrontation. Afterward, Williams (who, like Richard, is also a descendant of one of the original founding families) became obsessed with researching the history of the town, eventually discovering a "cycle" of death and mayhem that seems to visit the area once in a generation (or approximately once every thirty-odd years). We’ll start by examining the first of this “trilogy” to be published: Straub’s FLOATING DRAGON. It was intended as a “temporary farewell” to the supernatural fare with which Straub had made his fortune. As he later wrote, “I had decided to take my leave of all this dear, goofy imagery by wrapping it all together (and) blowing it up!” Furthermore, “Anything like restraint or good taste was verboten; the aesthetic was grounded in a single principle, that of excess.” Sounds interesting—more interesting, in fact, than the finished novel, which is definitely excessive (as the late Thomas M. Disch chastised it in a famously withering Twilight Zone magazine review, “Things that go bump in the night are generally scarier than things that go bump bump bump bump bump bump bump bump”), but also exasperating and ultimately unsatisfying. I think the biggest problem with Floating Dragon was that it couldn't decide if it wanted to be a supernatural or science-gone-awry tale. It begins with a pretty good setup of a DOD experimental project getting released into the atmosphere and then becomes the tale of a curse over Hampstead that recurs every 30 years or so. Even as the two threads continue, they never mesh in any significant way--in fact, the narrator of the story decides that the chemical accident was merely a coincidence. So the reader is left wondering why it was needed to bloat an already over-wrought story. IT definitely outdoes FLOATING DRAGON in excess and bad taste, containing perhaps the most outrageous sequence Stephen King has ever written. I’m referring to the climax, in which the kids descend into the sewers to vanquish It for the first time, an act the 11-year-old Beverly tops off by having sex with her six companions. The author’s reasoning can only be guessed at, but I will say this for the passage: it provides a concluding jolt that the rather disappointing final confrontation, in which the It becomes a big spider, doesn’t. We also like the fact that you’re able to win as much as 5,000X your total stake. While this isn’t as much as we’ve seen in some of the other recent slot releases, it’s still a decent amount - an amount many players would be more than happy to scoop!In this section we take a look at the payout potential of the Floating Dragon: Dragon Boat Festival slot. RTP



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