
Much in the vein of “Monster Mania,” the 5-reel, 15-payline slot game “Muchos Grande” offers the ability to gamble for cash or play for free; the former option with bets from as low as a penny to 50 cents, allowing up to 50 cents per payline and can yield up to 9000 coins.
Familiarity rears its head in the form of the wild, scatter and bonus features (represented by a gold coin, rattle snake, and treasure snake) which all inevitably contribute to greater (or at least any at all) cash opportunities.
Treasure maps (in sets of 3 or more on an active payline) allow for the selection of special “places” in which arbitrary prize values lie: the greater the accumulation of maps, the more “places” made available to achieve varying amounts of El Dorado (3 pay between 90 and 3000 coins, 4 pay between 120 and 4,000, and 5 pay between 150 and 5,000).
Unlike Monster Mania, less regular shapes appear in the game (hence, more special ones). They are stereotyped as would be expected in the forms of gold bags, “amigos”, donkeys, chilies, ears of corn, egg plants, avocados, and tomatoes. Then again, what else would you have from a Spanish game title that doesn’t have any respect for subject-gender agreement.
The basic, universally understood idea, however, is that this game has the potential to fill your donkey’s saddle bags with gold coins (enough to pay for a lifetime supply of various garden vegetables, especially ones native to Mexico).
