Paylines
Bingo lines (rows, columns, diagonals on each board)
Picture a chapel and a furnace welded together at the spine. That's the staging YGR picked for Angels vs Demons SpinGo, a bingo-slot crossover that runs two 5×5 boards in parallel rather than spinning reels. The left board glows in cathedral blue with feathered wing icons. The right one burns crimson with horned silhouettes. Every drawn ball marks both grids at once, which is the whole hook.
You start by clicking spin. Ten base rounds auto-fire, balls cycle through the central drawing chamber, and numbers light up on either side wherever they land. Before round one even begins, a few WILDs sit pre-marked on the initial layout, giving each board a small head-start. That only happens on the very first spin of the base game, so don't expect freebies later.
Lines pay off bingo-style. Rows, columns, diagonals, all five count toward a per-board prize ladder running from a stingy 0.04x up to a clean 100x for a Full House. Only the highest line count on each board scores, then both totals get summed at settlement. So in theory you can pull around 200x stake if both grids fill, which is rare but mechanically possible.
Two extras shake up the queue. A FREE symbol drawn during the main run tacks one extra round (5 numbers) onto the end. After the base ten finish, you get the option to buy Extra Rounds, up to ten of them, each revealing 5 fresh numbers for the displayed cost. Or just hit END GAME and cash out. Is the extra-round buy actually worth it? Depends on how many lines you're sitting on. If your boards already look messy with three or four lines locked, sure. If they're empty, you're probably throwing good money after bad.
YGR pegs volatility around the medium-high mark, though the studio doesn't publish RTP for its SpinGo series, which is annoying if you like to compare numbers before betting. Sessions feel rhythmic rather than explosive: balls drop, both boards tick, occasionally a wild trims your gap to a 6x or 20x line. The Full House dream stays distant. And honestly, the religious dualism theme has been done to death, but the dual-board execution here actually justifies it.