I know it’s a complicated game but Napoleon (voted game of the year) suffers from the most misleading rules I have come across. It has a paytable for wilds but again unless blocked by a scatter will always connect with lower paying symbols. It is therefore impossible to hit 4 wilds (yet it’s in the paytable). 4 wilds = 1,200. I know 4 wilds and a 9 I think pays 1,280 because the wilds multiply but you would assume the wilds would multiply if it was possible to get 4. Maybe someone has seen a clearer set of rules for this game but I think it is clearly misleading at best.
I would say it's more a case misleading at worst, and VERY poorly thought out ie not even thought out at all at best.
I can't help but think that because...
i. a 2OAK of wilds pays 400 (and pays more than any 5OAK of 9s or Ts that includes 2 wilds - which both pay 320) and
ii. a 3OAK of wilds pays 800 (and pays more than any 5OAK of 9s or Ts that includes 3 wilds - which both pay 640)
....they just decided "we'll make the pay award for 4 wilds the next available multiple of 400".
But in doing so, they
completely overlooked the fact that the payout for any 5OAK of 9s or Ts that includes 4 wilds (which pays 1,280 as you've already stated) exceeds the payout for 4 wilds, thus making the payout for 4 wilds (as far as I can see) the impossibility that you correctly said it is.
Perhaps it would have been a better idea if Blueprint had made 4 wilds pay 1600 ie by doubling up the payout of each extra wild at the start of a payline, instead of using the next multiple of 400?
That way, if you got 4 wilds followed by a 9 or a 10, then you got paid for 4 wilds.
Sure, it would be the ONLY way that a payout for 4 wilds could be achieved, but it at least would ensure that a payout for a 4OAK of wilds is not impossible.
But if you got 4 wilds followed by a J or higher paying symbol, then you got paid for a 5OAK of the following symbol, at 16x.
Regardless of where the 4 wilds are on the payline.
As for the payouts themselves, I have found that the payouts are correct. Although, I must confess, I've felt the need to check,
because there have been occasions where I thought the payout was actually
too much, rather than being too little.
For example, a wild followed by a solider or a solider followed by a wild actually pays twice as much as a 2OAK of wilds.
A 2OAK of wilds (400) pays out more than a 5OAK of As or Ks with no wilds (320), a 5OAK of Qs or Js with 1 wild (320)
and a 5OAK or 10s or 9s with 2 wilds (320).
I suppose Napoleon is one of those slots where it's complicated, but with a surprising upside payout-wise (in some cases).