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Magic 7s

Magic 7s Average ratng: 7,4/10 558 votes
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Magic 7’s Guide

Scratch off the ten Magic Hats on the card to reveal a number below each. You win a prize if any number is ‘7’, or better still, a Magic Hat. The prize on the ‘7’ ranges from a free card to a multiplier up to 3,000 times your bet amount. If you scratch a Magic Hat, your prize money is double the amount shown. Even when you don’t win on a particular scratch card, there’s the random jackpot, which could randomly drop between games.

How to Play Magic 7’s

Magic 7’s is an easy-to-play scratch card game with many prizes. The game card displays 10 hats. The object of the game is to uncover either the number 7, or a Magic Hat. To play, click on the Bet key to select the amount you want to wager. Click on the Play key that activates the hats. Click on each of the hats to reveal the hidden number, or click on “Scratch All”.

You Win When

For the number 7, you win the prize shown on the ‘spot’ below the number. It could be a free game, or a multiplier on your wager.

You may find more than one 7 on a card. One ‘7’ could earn you a free game to play, another could be 1x the bet amount, and a third could be 2x the amount. The multipliers go up to 3000x your wager.

If you uncover a Magic Hat, you win twice the prize shown on the spot. So, if the prize shown is 2x, your win is actually four times your bet.

Game Features & Bonus Rounds

Magic 7’s appear fairly regularly on the cards, awarding the prize the spot reveals. The least you can win for any 7 is a free game. If you are lucky, you could win a prize on your free game card.

Magic 7s release date

The Magic Hat, however, is rather elusive. But when it does appear, watch your dollars multiply as it awards double the prize revealed on the spot.

Jackpot Info

You can win the random jackpot with any scratch card that you play regardless of whether you win or lose. The jackpot ticks away constantly and can drop any time between games.

Additional Rules

Seven Magic Mountains Las Vegas

  • Reveal a 7 and win the prize shown.
  • Find a Magic Hat and win double the prize shown.
  • Prizes range from a Free Card to multipliers on your bet.
  • Payout multipliers are 1x, 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, 10x, 15x, 20x, 25x, 50x, 200x, 500x, 1000x, and 3000x your wager.

Strategy & Tips

The thrill of playing Magic 7’s lies in its simplicity and the huge payouts it is capable of giving. There is no real strategy involved in winning, but this casino specialty game gives you instant rewards, and provides excellent chances of winning something on every card. You may in fact, get more than one win in a game.

History

Scratch cards have enjoyed universal appeal, ever since the combined efforts of marketing genius, Daniel Bower and scientist, John Koza of Scientific Games Corporation, introduced the instant lottery ticket. The thrill of scratching a surface to uncover a prize has no age or generation barriers.

The low cost of a ticket and the possibility of big wins made scratch cards so popular that several governments, along with the U.S. and the U.K., use them for state and regional lotteries.

Online scratch cards became popular when the Internet became the new frontier for casinos. From kiosks at grocery stores and cafes, scratch cards have acquired a sophistication that makes them equal to glitzy online slots and card games.

Magic

The Magic 7’s scratch card is inspired by the mystique of the Number 7. The number has a special significance in almost all religions and mythologies, including the Seven Wonders of the World, the seven colors of the rainbow, the seven classical planets, the seven deadly sins, seven days of the week, seventh heaven, etc.

The number 7 is a lucky number for gamblers, too. It plays a key role in casino games of chance like Craps where rolling a 7 means a win.

Glossary

You will enjoy the immediate rewards of playing Scratch Cards when you understand all of the terminology associated with the game.

Hat: The scratch card features a set of ten hats. Each one has to be uncovered to reveal a number.

7: Reveal a lucky number 7 under the hats, and you win.

Magic Hat: A Magic Hat revealed under a hat gets you twice the prize shown.

Free Card: One of the prizes awarded on the scratch card.

Balance: The money available for you to play the game.

The original Hi-Matic of 1962
Minolta Hi-Matic F rangefinder camera made in Japan 1972
The Hi-Matic 7 SII of 1977
Hi-Matic AF, 1979
Minolta Hi-Matic AF2 rangefinder camera made in Japan 1981
Hi-Matic GF, 1984

Hi-Matic was the name of a long-running series of 35 mmcameras made by Minolta. The original Hi-Matic of 1962 was the first Minolta camera to feature automatic exposure and achieved a small degree of fame when a version (the Ansco Autoset) was taken into space by John Glenn in 1962.[1]

Magic 7 Chem

Models[edit]

The first Hi-Matic, introduced in 1962, was offered with a 45 mm f/2 or 45 mm f/2.8 lens and featured a built-in seleniumlight meter and rangefinder. Both the aperture and shutter speed were set automatically. The Hi-Matic was also rebadged as the Ansco Autoset.

The Hi-Matic 7 followed in 1963. It had a faster f/1.8 lens and used a CdS cell instead of a selenium meter. Additionally, it gave photographers the option of setting the exposure manually, an option not available in the original Hi-Matic. The Hi-Matic 7S and Hi-Matic 9, both released in 1966, were somewhat improved versions of the popular 7. Compared with the 7, the 7S had the Contrast Light Compensator (CLC) metering system. The CLC had two CdS cells connected in series that purportedly offered superior metering, especially in high contrast lighting.[2] Also, the 7S had a hot shoe instead of the cold shoe of the 7. The 9 was the same as the 7S with the addition of a slightly faster f/1.7 lens, additional shutter speeds of 1/2 and 1 sec., and Minolta's 'Easy-Flash' system, which simplified flash photography. The Hi-Matic 11 of 1969 was similar to the 9, but the 11 had shutter priority automatic exposure, aperture and shutter speed displayed in the viewfinder, and no aperture ring.

In 1969 Minolta came out with a new, smaller model, the Hi-Matic C. In the interest of compactness, it had a smaller 40 mm f/2.7 lens (which was collapsible), reduced aperture and shutter speed ranges, and no longer featured a rangefinder. The C had shutter-priority automatic exposure with a CdS meter. The Hi-Matic 5, also released in 1969, was basically a less expensive C without the collapsing lens.

The Hi-Matic E of 1971 was a much-improved version of the C with a 40 mm f/1.7 lens and a rangefinder. It used the same Electro Control automatic exposure system found on the Yashica Electro cameras. The E was followed by a succession of increasingly inexpensive models, the Hi-Matic F in 1972, the Hi-Matic G in 1974, and the Hi-Matic G2 in 1982. The Electro Control system was abandoned after the F in favor of a simpler system.

The next Hi-Matic model, which was called the Hi-Matic 7 SII and came out in 1977, was considered to be one of the finest Minolta rangefinders. It featured a 40 mm f/1.7 lens and shutter priority automatic exposure in addition to manual controls, all in a compact package.

A built in electronic flash came to the series for the first time in 1978 with the Hi-Matic S. It was a fully automatic (except for focusing) camera equipped with a Rokkor 38 mm f/2.7 lens. There were several variants, including the Hi-Matic SD (date back), the Hi-Matic S2 (slightly slower lens), and the Hi-Matic SD2 (S2 with a date back). Focusing was automated in 1979 with the introduction of the Hi-Matic AF, which was essentially an S2 with the addition of autofocus.

Magic

The last Hi-Matic was the Hi-Matic GF of 1984, a very simple and cheap plastic model which was not sold in the United States. It had a 38mm f/4 lens that allowed to choose between three predefined apertures denoted by beginner friendly icons: sunny, partly cloudy and cloudy. Focusing was manual and set in four steps from about 1 m to infinite.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Astronaut Still Photography During Apollo: Before Apollo', NASA website
  2. ^'Minolta Technical Bulletin A'. The Rokkor Files. Retrieved 19 May 2015.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Minolta Hi-Matic.

Magic 7 Stone

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