Ace Of Spades Game Download

Ace of Spades is a product developed by Jagex Ltd.This site is not directly affiliated with Jagex Ltd.All trademarks, registered trademarks, product names and company names or logos mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners. Ace of Spades May 24 2012 Full Version 56 comments. Download Ace of Spades now – it’s awesome, free and runs on any PC. It’s the best bits of Minecraft crossed with the fast-paced shooter gameplay.

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Brought to you by Play’n GO, this classic slot is going to take you for a trip back in time by providing you with the ultimate classic sensation.
The game offers traditional 3 wheels and only one single pay line, making it incredibly traditional.

This classic slot is brought to you by the Swedish developer Play’n GO. In any case, it’s highly likely that the majority of people wouldn’t have heard about this particular manufacturer as they’ve been under the radar for the last few years.
In any case, the company has bound to change that and the results are more than evident. They’ve issued a wide array of interesting mobile slot titles which has made them raise to a position of prominence.

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The Ace of Spades Themes

If you are looking for monsters, adventures, high-tech, space themes and what not, look away and keep going. Ace of Spades offers nothing of the kind. The theme of the game is one and it’s classic – cards. As the name suggests, you’d be landing on card symbols.

Game Type

This is a classic slot. This doesn’t mean that it’s outdated or worthless, not at all. The machine is incredibly easy to play due to its simplicity and this is what attracts more and more players. The payouts are easy to memorize and the winning combinations are not hard to understand. This allows players to feel comfortable.

What’s The Game About?

Basically, the game is about aligning three identical symbols on the one, singular pay line. The game offers one pay line and three reels, just like the old mechanic slots.

Three different stakes. You can set the Ace of Spades slot to play at three different stakes and the coins per level are, quite logically, 1,00, 2,00 and 3,00. Furthermore, the more you increase the level, the more the jackpot increases as well. Therefore, the game offers a steady potential of high income.

If you play maximum coins and you manage to land the jackpot symbols, which are the aces of spades, you can get an enhanced jackpot of 2.500 coins, which is rather significant. There is a wild multiplier symbol which doubles the winning combinations.

Bonuses. Ace of Spades does not offer any wild symbols or other bonus features. The game is as classic as it could get but that’s one of the main reasons for which players seem to prefer it so much.

(Redirected from Spadille)
Ace of spades
1828 'Old Frizzle'

The Ace of Spades (also known as the Spadille and Death Card[1]) is traditionally the highest and most valued card in the deck of playing cards in English-speaking countries. The actual value of the card varies from game to game.[2][3]

Design[edit]

The ornate design of the ace of spades, common in packs today, stems from the 17th century, when James I and later Queen Anne imposed laws requiring the ace of spades to bear an insignia of the printing house. Stamp duty, an idea imported to England by Charles I, was extended to playing cards in 1711 by Queen Anne and lasted until 1960.[4][5]

Over the years a number of methods were used to show that duty had been paid. From 1712 onwards, one of the cards in the pack, usually the ace of spades, was marked with a hand stamp. In 1765 hand stamping was replaced by the printing of official ace of spades by the Stamp Office, incorporating the royal coat of arms. In 1828 the Duty Ace of Spades (known as 'Old Frizzle') was printed to indicate a reduced duty of a shilling had been paid.[6]

The system was changed again in 1862 when official threepenny duty wrappers were introduced and although the makers were free to use whatever design they wanted, most chose to keep the ornate ace of spades that is popular today.[6] The ace of spades is thus used to show the card manufacturer's information.

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The exact design of the ace card was so important, it eventually became the subject of design patents and trademarking. For example, on December 5, 1882, George G. White was granted US design patent US0D0013473[7] for his design. His ace design was adorned with male and female figures leaning onto the spade from either side.

War[edit]

US Army footage from 'Operation Baker' 1967 showing US troops putting aces of spades in the mouths of dead VietCong/NLF (can be seen 1:53 min:sec & 2:34 min:sec into the video footage)

The ace of spades has been employed, on numerous occasions, in the theater of war. In the Second World War, the soldiers of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the American101st Airborne Division were marked with the spades symbol painted on the sides of their helmet. In this capacity, it was used to represent good luck, due to its fortunate connotations in card playing. All four card suits were used for easy of identification of regiments within the airborne division following the confusion of a large scale combat airborne operation. Battalions within the regiments were denoted with tic marks or dots, marked from top clockwise: headquarters at the twelve o'clock position, 1st Battalion at the three o'clock, etc.

Some twenty years later, a folk legend about the ace of spades being used by American Soldiers during the Vietnam War was popularized. Supposedly, US troops believed that Vietnamese traditions held the symbolism of the spade to mean death and ill-fortune and in a bid to frighten and demoralize Viet Cong soldiers, it was common practice to mockingly leave an ace of spades on the bodies of killed Vietnamese and even to litter the forested grounds and fields with the card.[citation needed] This custom was said to be so effective that the United States Playing Card Company was asked by Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment to supply crates of that single card in bulk. The plain white tuck cases were marked 'Bicycle Secret Weapon', and the cards were deliberately scattered in villages and in the jungle during raids.[8][9] The ace of spades, while not a symbol of superstitious fear to the Viet Cong forces, did help the morale of American soldiers. It was not unheard of for US Soldiers and Marines to stick this card in their helmet band as a sort of anti-peace sign.[citation needed]

More recently, in 2003 a deck of most-wanted Iraqi playing cards was issued to US Soldiers during Operation Iraqi Freedom, each card had the picture of a wanted Iraqi official on it. Saddam Hussein got the nickname 'Ace of Spades' as that card bore his image.

Idioms[edit]

Various idioms involving the ace of spades include, 'black as the ace of spades,' which may refer either to color, race, (lack of) morality, or (lack of) cleanliness in a person.[10][a]

There is the French expression fagoté comme l'as de pique—that is, '(badly) dressed like the ace of spades.'[11]

In Unicode[edit]

  • U+1F0A1🂡PLAYING CARD ACE OF SPADES is part of the playing cards in Unicode

See[edit]

Ace Of Spades Game Download

  • Richard Harding, hanged in London for forgery of the duty stamp on the ace of spades and knowingly selling playing cards with the same in 1805.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^For an example of the card referring to race, see Aaron McGruder, Public Enemy #2: An All-New Boondocks Collection (New York: Three Rivers Press, 2005), front cover.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Spadille' in Merriam-WebsterArchived 2015-10-19 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^Death Cards - Psychological OperationsArchived 2014-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^'The Tarot Death Card'. Archived from the original on 2007-12-26. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
  4. ^Knuckle, White, A Brief History of Playing Cards, retrieved November 22, 2013
  5. ^Hughes, E (2004). The English Stamp Duties, 1664-1764. 56, no.222 (April 1941). English Historical Review. p. 245.
  6. ^ abSchott, Ben (2004). 'Card Tax & The Ace of Spades'. Schott's Sporting, Gaming & Idling Miscellany. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 62. ISBN0-7475-6924-X.
  7. ^'Patent Images'. patimg2.uspto.gov.
  8. ^Ace of Spades or Secret Weapon Death Playing Cards at Newt's Playing CardsArchived December 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^'Our History'. Bicycle Playing Cards. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  10. ^Gandhi, Lakshmi, 'Is It Racist To 'Call a Spade a Spade'?', Codeswitch, National Public Radio, September 23, 2013 (retrieved June 14, 2014).
  11. ^'As', Cassell's New French Dictionary (5th ed., 1951).

External links[edit]

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