PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Kingjackpot.co.uk Offers Refreshing Bingo and Casino Games for All

King Jackpot presents a wide range of games including a unique mix of bingo games and slots that have gained in popularity amongst UK players online.

2012-07-29
GUERNSEY, CHANNEL ISLANDS, July 29, 2012 (Press-News.org) There are a number of real money gaming sites today, but not all offer the variety of games you can find at King Jackpot UK who specialize in playing bingo games online. The site may not have intense card games like poker, baccarat or video poker, but it does have a range of interesting and stimulating games that can entertain you. The set of games on this site are unique, which makes it refreshing and attractive to the thousands of online bingo players in the UK.

King Jackpot offers two bingo variants. One is the 90-ball or the European bingo variant, which is highly popular in the UK, Europe and parts of Asia. The other is the American version or the 75-ball version, which is prominent in the community bingo rooms of the US. The site hosts regular games in both formats, for real money and also for free. The free games on the site are held randomly, at the Knight's Lounge for the American version and the Queen's Palace for the European one. In addition to these variants, King Jackpot also offers a networked bingo game called Mega Bingo every day.

King Jackpot members can also enjoy a variety of unique slot machine games on the site. Featured games include popular ones like Monopoly, Fruit Frenzy, Mermaids Treasure, Lost City of Atlantis, Pyramids of Cash and Super 7. In addition to that, the site also has a few unique games like Slots of Bingo, Posh Life, Jackpot Jamboree, Genie Fortune, Show Me The Money, Flower Power, African Safari, and more. King Jackpot is also offering a free bonus which can be used for wagering on slots games of your choice.

Along with the bingo and slot games, the King Jackpot bingo and gaming site also has classic casino games that you might be interested in. These include Roulette, Dino Keno, Jacks or Better, Deuces Wild and Blackjack - single-player and multi-player formats. For those who cannot spare a lot of time, the site also offers instant win games such as Scratch Cards, Cash Fiesta, Blackbeard's Booty, High Low, Jungle Fever, Mystic Keno, Galaxy of Riches and Crack the Safe.

The graphics of these games are simply superb, considering the site uses the popular Leapfrog 3D software. In addition to that, almost every game on the site has a jackpot, which could run into a few thousands, or even a few hundred thousands in case of progressives. Play online today at http://www.kingjackpot.co.uk.

Licensed in Alderney and regulated by the Alderney Gambling Control Commission, King Jackpot is one of the best online gaming sites in the UK now. The site is certified for its safe and fair gaming practices and for its advocacy of responsible gambling. The site is powered by Leapfrog and offers a range of games that appeal to people of all ages. Along with the regular cash prizes, King Jackpot also offers massive jackpot prizes from time to time, which makes it one of the best places to enjoy 3D casino gaming and also earn a lot of money in the process. Find out more today at http://www.kingjackpot.co.uk.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Even Usain Bolt can't beat greyhounds, cheetahs...or pronghorn antelope

2012-07-28
[Animal athletes: a performance view Veterinary Record July 28; 171; 87-94] Even Usain Bolt, currently the fastest man in the world, couldn't outpace greyhounds, cheetahs, or the pronghorn antelope, finds a light-hearted comparison of the extraordinary athleticism of humans and animals in the Veterinary Record. As Olympic competition starts in earnest today, Craig Sharp from the Centre for Sports Medicine and Human Performance at Brunel University, highlights a range of animals whose speed and strength easily trumps that of our most elite athletes. Humans can run ...

UK medical school teaching on physical activity virtually 'non-existent'

2012-07-28
[Physical activity education in the undergraduate curricula of all UK medical schools. Are tomorrow's doctors equipped to follow clinical guidelines? Online First doi 10.1136/bjsports-2012-091380] UK medical school teaching on physical activity is "sparse or non-existent," finds research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine today. This knowledge gap will leave tomorrow's doctors ill equipped to promote physical activity effectively to their patients and stem the rising tide of serious disease associated with lack of exercise, say the authors. They ...

Discovery of new white blood cell reveals target for better vaccine design

2012-07-28
Researchers in Newcastle and Singapore have identified a new type of white blood cell which activates a killing immune response to an external source – providing a new potential target for vaccines for conditions such as cancer or Hepatitis B. Publishing in the journal Immunity, the team of researchers from Newcastle University in collaboration with A*STAR's Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN) describe a new human tissue dendritic cell with cross-presenting function. Dendritic cells (DCs) are a type of white blood cell that orchestrate our body's immune responses to ...

Landmark HIV treatment-as-prevention study shows additional health benefits, cost-effectiveness

2012-07-28
WHAT: Further analyses of the landmark NIH-funded treatment-as-prevention study (HPTN 052) have found that providing antiretroviral treatment to HIV-infected individuals earlier, when their immune systems are healthier, delays AIDS-related health events, such as chronic herpes simplex virus and tuberculosis, as well as death. Additionally, researchers found that earlier HIV treatment is also cost-effective because it increases survival, prevents costly opportunistic infections and averts transmission of the virus to uninfected individuals. The two analyses were presented ...

Study finds novel therapy that may prevent damage to the retina in diabetic eye diseases

2012-07-28
Researchers at the University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center have identified a compound that could interrupt the chain of events that cause damage to the retina in diabetic retinopathy. The finding is significant because it could lead to a novel therapy that targets two mechanisms at the root of the disease: inflammation and the weakening of the blood barrier that protects the retina. To date, treatments for diabetic retinopathy, the leading cause of blindness among working-age Americans, have been aimed largely at one of those mechanisms. In diabetic retinopathy, ...

Tumor cells' inner workings predict cancer progression

Tumor cells inner workings predict cancer progression
2012-07-28
Using a new assay method to study tumor cells, researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center have found evidence of clonal evolution in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The assay method distinguishes features of leukemia cells that indicate whether the disease will be aggressive or slow-moving, a key factor in when and how patients are treated. The findings are published in the July 26, 2012 First Edition online issue of Blood. The progression of CLL is highly variable, dependent upon the rate and ...

NASA sees organizing tropical low pressure area near the Philippines

NASA sees organizing tropical low pressure area near the Philippines
2012-07-28
A low pressure system in the western North Pacific has caught the eye of forecasters and several satellites as it continues to organize. NASA's Terra satellite captured a view of System 93W's clouds as they continue to appear more organized. System 93W appears poised to become tropical storm Saola over the next two days if the organization continues. At 1400 UTC (10 a.m. EDT/U.S.; 10 p.m. Asia/Manila local time) System 93W had maximum sustained winds near 20 knots (23 mph/37 kmh). It was located about 395 nautical miles (454.6 miles/731.5 km) east-southeast of Manila, ...

UCLA researchers discover that fluoxetine -- a.k.a., Prozac -- is effective as an anti-viral

2012-07-28
UCLA researchers have come across an unexpected potential use for fluoxetine – commonly known as Prozac – which shows promise as an antiviral agent. The discovery could provide another tool in treating human enteroviruses that sicken and kill people in the U.S. and around the world. Human enteroviruses are members of a genus containing more than 100 distinct RNA viruses responsible for various life threatening infections, such as poliomyelitis and encephalitis. While immunization has all but eliminated the poliovirus, the archetype for the genus, no antiviral drugs ...

Martian polygons and deep-sea polygons on Earth: More evidence for ancient Martian oceans?

2012-07-28
Boulder, Colorado, USA - Debate over the origin of large-scale polygons (hundreds of meters to kilometers in diameter) on Mars remains active even after several decades of detailed observations. Similarity in geometric patterns on Mars and Earth has long captured the imagination. In this new article from GSA Today, geologists at The University of Texas at Austin examine these large-scale polygons and compare them to similar features on Earth's seafloor, which they believe may have formed via similar processes. Understanding these processes may in turn fuel support for ...

Think you're a comic genius? Maybe you're just overconfident

2012-07-28
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Knock, knock! Who's there? Cows go. Cows go who? No, cows go moo! OK, OK. So it's not a side-slapper — especially if the teller has zero sense of comic timing. But most likely the person sharing the joke over the water cooler thinks he or she is pretty funny. No matter how badly the joke is told, it will sometimes elicit a few polite laughs. Why? Because social norms make us averse to providing negative feedback, says Joyce Ehrlinger, a Florida State University assistant professor of psychology whose latest laboratory research recreated everyday ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

DNA nanospring measures cellular motor power

Elsevier Foundation and RIKEN launch “Envisioning Futures” report: paving the way for gender equity and women’s leadership in Japanese research

Researchers discover enlarged areas of the spinal cord in fish, previously found only in four-limbed vertebrates

Bipolar disorder heterogeneity decoded: transforming global psychiatric treatment approaches

Catching Alport syndrome through universal age-3 urine screening

Instructions help you remember something better than emotions or a good night’s sleep

Solar energy is now the world’s cheapest source of power, a Surrey study finds

Scientists reverse Alzheimer’s in mice using nanoparticles

‘Good’ gut bacteria boosts placenta for healthier pregnancy

USC team demonstrates first optical device based on “optical thermodynamics”

Microplastics found to change gut microbiome in first human-sample study

Artificially sweetened and sugary drinks are both associated with an increased risk of liver disease, study finds

Plastic in the soil, but not as we know it: Biodegradable microplastics rewire carbon storage in farm fields

Yeast proteins reveal the secrets of drought resistance

Psychiatry, primary care, and OB/GYN subspecialties hit hardest by physician attrition

New Canadian study reveals where HIV hides in different parts of the body

Lidocaine poisonings rise despite overall drop in local anesthetic toxicity

Politics follow you on the road

Scientists blaze new path to fighting viral diseases

The mouse eye as a window to spotting systemic disease

AI and the Future of Cancer Research and Cancer Care to headline October 24 gathering of global oncology leaders at the National Press Club: NFCR Global Summit to feature top scientists, entrepreneurs

FDA clears UCLA heart tissue regeneration drug AD-NP1 for clinical trials

Exploring the therapeutic potential of cannabidiol for Alzheimer's

We need a solar sail probe to detect space tornadoes earlier, more accurately, U-M researchers say

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML): Disease risk but not remission status determines transplant outcomes – new ASAP long-term results

Sperm microRNAs: Key regulators of the paternal transmission of exercise capacity

Seeing double: Clever images open doors for brain research

Inhaler-related greenhouse gas emissions in the US

UCLA Health study finds inhalers for asthma and COPD drive significant greenhouse gas emissions

A surgical handover system for patient physiology and safety

[Press-News.org] Kingjackpot.co.uk Offers Refreshing Bingo and Casino Games for All
King Jackpot presents a wide range of games including a unique mix of bingo games and slots that have gained in popularity amongst UK players online.