Provider:
Betsoft
The red dice are the symbol to watch on Mr. Vegas, and it isn't because they pay. A pair lands and the marquee along the top ticks one notch closer to the five it needs. When the fifth drops, the reels hand the screen over to the Money Wheel. That counter on the marquee is worth half an eye,…
The red dice do two jobs on Mr. Vegas, and neither of them is paying a line. Land them as scatters and they hand you a short batch of free spins on their own. Collect five in a single spin and the marquee stops counting. The reels step aside, and you are spinning the Money Wheel that the rest of the features hide behind. Pretty much every moment worth pointing at in my session started with that dice icon.
The rest of the time the reels idle. I ran 374 spins at 0.90 a go on a balance that opened at 1,000, and deep into the run it was still reading 990. That is the shape of the whole sitting: a steady drip off the Welcome signs and chip lines that ran up a little and down a little, with the wheel the only thing that ever lifted the number by more than a credit or two at once. If you want swings, this run did not have them.
The Minty Take: Mr. Vegas suits players who would rather tour a casino's mini-games than chase one big number. Five red dice open a Money Wheel, and that wheel is the door to a little 777 cabinet and a top-down roulette pick. Free spins land on the side, and the variety is the reason to load it. The one thing it will not do is swing: across 374 spins my balance barely moved off where it started, so anyone after real volatility should look elsewhere. Sit down for the features.
The backbone of the base game is the neon Welcome to Las Vegas sign. It turns up on most spins and forms the bulk of the little wins, usually paired with the green-and-pink casino chip stack. A typical hit looked like the one that paid 0.45: a row of Vegas signs running into a chip stack across the middle, enough to nudge the balance and little more. The roulette wheel and a dealt blackjack hand sit in the same low-to-mid band and fill out the grid between them.
What stayed quiet were the people. Three character premiums sit at the top of the paytable, and across 374 spins not one of those faces lined up stacked enough to pay like a top symbol should. They showed up constantly as scenery; they just never assembled into the big base-game line the artwork keeps promising.


The one base symbol that behaved like a real premium was the showgirl in the red feathered headdress. She gave me the two cleanest line wins of the base game outside the features, 1.20 across the second row and later 2.40 along the bottom with the payline lights tracing the lower edge. Neither is a number to write home about, but on a run this flat they were the moments the reels did something on their own. So she is where the realistic base-game value sits, while the three character faces stacked above her on the paytable stayed theoretical for the whole session.


Drop three or more red dice as scatters and you go straight to free spins, no wheel required. It happened inside the first dozen spins for me and kept happening, in batches of five to eight spins. The bonus reels are the base reels with a counter ticking down in the corner. There is no new mechanic to learn, just more spins at the same odds.
The payouts matched the modesty of the base game. One seven-spin round limped home around 0.60. A five-spin round added a champagne-bucket hit of 0.60 on the centre reel toward a 1.80 total. The best was an eight-spin round that landed a 5.40 line for a 6x hit, on its way to a 7.50 round. Friendly enough, but nothing that resets a session.


Collect the full five dice and the Money Wheel takes over, and this is the part that justifies loading Mr. Vegas at all. One click sets a tall wheel spinning, and its slices are split between cash, free spins and a Bonus wedge. It paid me a straight 9.00 cash slice on one spin. That was a 10x hit, and nothing else in the run came near it. Another spin handed over eight free spins instead.
The wheel is also the only way into the deeper features. One stop dropped me into a slot-within-a-slot, a classic three-reel 777 cabinet with three spins on the side and Mr. Vegas himself leaning over the top of it. Another sent me to a top-down roulette table for a quick pick, green felt filling the screen and a dealer's hand resting on the rail. The 270 Mega Jackpot ticking on the header is the wheel's ceiling, kept for players betting at the top of the range. Betsoft built this one back in 2012, and the wheel is still the cleverest thing on it.



Load it for the Money Wheel and the mini-games it opens, and treat the reels as the turnstile you spin to get to them.