Gold Money Frog
Gold Money Frog slot has 5 reels, 3 rows and 25 pay-lines: just like the Legend of 9 Suns Slot which is another Asian corker. It can be played from £0.25p all the way up to a mega high rolling £50.00 per spin. The Gold Money Frog slot is a 5 reel and 25 payline game set to the backdrop of Asian temples and glowing lotus flowers. Spinning in on the reels are golden frogs, dragons, bridges adorned with pink flowers, a kite and jack through ace cards.
- Gold Money Frog Free Slot NetEnt knows what it’s doing with its games. For example, Gold Money Frog online slot is a great game that has all of the amazing features the players hunt for, plus a great theme. Both the graphics along with the music are suitable and incite you to try it out for yourself. Play the free version now!
- Download the Gold Money Frog Promotion Pack from NetEnt's Client Area today to boost your Casino Performance.
- Jan 19, 2021 A fortune frog, or money frog, is a mythical three-legged frog with red eyes and flaring nostrils. It carries a coin in its mouth, and sits upon a pile of gold coins or Chinese cash with a string.
The Jin Chan (Chinese: 金蟾; pinyin: jīn chán; lit. 'Golden Toad'), also called Chan Chu (Chinese: 蟾蜍; pinyin: chánchú; lit. 'Toad') or 'Zhaocai Chan Chu' (Chinese: 招财蟾蜍; pinyin: zhāocái chánchú; lit. 'wealth-beckoning toad'), is most commonly translated as 'Money Toad' or 'Money Frog'. It represents a popular Feng Shui charm for prosperity.
This mythical creature is said to appear during the full moon, near houses or businesses that will soon receive good news (most of the time, the nature of this good news is understood to be wealth-related).
The money toad is associated with Liu Haichan, as the sennin's animal companion.
The Jin Chan is usually depicted as a bullfrog with red eyes, flared nostrils and only one hind leg (for a total of three legs), sitting on a pile of traditional Chinese cash, with a coin in its mouth. On its back, it often displays seven diamond spots. According to Feng Shui beliefs, Jin Chan helps attract and protect wealth, and guards against bad luck. Because it symbolizes the flow of money, Feng Shui lore insists that a Jin Chan statue should not be positioned facing the main door ('outward'). It also 'should never be kept in the bathroom, bedroom, dining room or kitchen'.[1]
See also[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chan Chu. |
References[edit]
- ^'The Three-Legged Money Frog: Some Dos and Don'ts'. Archived from the original on November 28, 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
- Ch’an Chu: The Lucky Money Toad, The Anthropology of Money in Southern California