Habanero went out of its way with the Wild treatment here. Instead of one repeating Wild graphic across the 5×3 grid, each reel hosts its own painted mariachi portrait. Guitar, trumpet, accordion, violin, maracas, each a separate character in a sombrero and embroidered border tile. They all act as Wilds for the paying symbols and they carry multipliers, which is where the splash screen's MARIACHI WILD MULTIPLIERS tag comes from. On a 25-line grid that's a lot of substitution coverage, especially since the per-reel Wilds tend to land in places a single roaming Wild wouldn't.
Two bonus paths sit underneath. Three or more turquoise sugar skull Scatters drop you into 15 Free Spins with a Shape-shifting Senorita active. She's a separate character who transforms between paying symbols mid-spin to glue near-miss lines together, and on this 25-payline layout that morph step is the difference between four-hit and seven-hit boards. The second trigger is the donkey pinata symbol, which leads into a Pinata Pick round paying anywhere from 2x to 100x bet depending on what you crack open. It's pick-and-reveal in the most literal sense, no spinning wheels, no ladders.
There's also a real progressive at the top. The live build runs a 4-stage jackpot pool topping out at 500,000 coins, and the demo collapses it to a single Race tier with a countdown in the toolbar (“next race in 1d 13h 45m”). Worth noting, this is a 2017 release, so there's no Buy Feature menu and no ante-bet toggle on the left rail. You spin into the bonuses or you don't.
Art-wise it's the warmest fiesta art Habanero has shipped. Adobe-roofed houses behind the reels, two giant saguaros standing guard on either side, papel picado pennants strung across the top in pink and yellow and blue, and a soft cloud-filled sky. Card royals (A, K, Q, J) sit inside green and orange stamped tiles, with tequila bottle, brown guitar, chili pepper, and cactus filling the mids. The whole presentation leans hard into the Cinco de Mayo aesthetic, no generic placeholder symbols anywhere. Honestly, the 2,500x ceiling feels small next to what modern releases push, but for a medium-vol lines slot from this era it's about right.