Provider
Blueprint Gaming
Paylines
10 fixed paylines
Most Egyptian slots feel like they were assembled from the same box of hieroglyph stickers. Anubis Rising Jackpot King at least earns its tomb. Blueprint released this version in April 2024 as the progressive cousin of the standard Anubis Rising, and the headline change is structural rather than cosmetic. You're still on a 5×3 grid with 10 fixed paylines, still chasing scarabs and ankhs across a sandstone temple, but a Jackpot King side panel now sits to the left, showing the Regal Pot and Royal Pot ticking upward while you play.
The base math takes a small hit for that pleasure. Combined RTP lands at 94.99%, split as 94.5% base plus a 0.49% contribution funneled into the network progressive pool. Volatility is high, and Blueprint isn't shy about where the money lives. Most of the return sits inside the Free Games round, which means dry stretches are baked in. Honestly, if you can't stomach long cold spells, the JK variant probably isn't the right pick.
Where the design earns its keep is the wild family. Three distinct Anubis and Pharaoh wilds can land, and every single one expands to fill the full reel when it does. A fourth, the Gold Anubis, only unlocks through the pre-bonus pick. That pick is the clever bit. Before Free Games kick off, you reveal up to five upgrades from a Pick A Bonus screen. Symbol upgrades, Super Wilds, Extra Wilds, Gold Anubis with multipliers up to x10, and additional spins. Whatever you reveal stays active for the whole round.
Trigger requires 3 or more Bonus Scatters, which awards 12 Free Games plus cash prizes that scale with scatter count. Five scatters pays 500x line bet on entry alone. Stack a Super Wilds modifier with Gold Anubis multipliers and the round can run hot. Max win caps at 5,000x on the base game, and then the Jackpot King layer sits on top of that as a separate prize entirely. The progressive can hit on any spin per Blueprint's own marketing, no qualifying scatter required.
Stakes run from 0.10 to 50 per spin. And the engine is the older 1.7 generation, so don't expect snappy modern transitions. But the wild geometry and the upgrade picks keep base play interesting enough between scatter triggers.