Caishen's Cash Pots is Pragmatic Play's fresh stab at the Caishen wealth-god formula, dropping on June 4, 2026. The studio pairs its familiar Money Symbol mechanic with a four-pot scatter system tied to the Phoenix, Dragon, Tiger, and Fish. Four divine creatures, four ceremonial vessels stacked above the reels, four ways the bonus round can swing in your favour. Each pot fills as its matching scatter lands, and the more pots you stuff before the trigger, the meaner the modifiers get inside Free Spins.
The base game is straightforward. Money symbols carrying random values from 2x to 500x drop on reels 1 to 4, and the Collect symbol on reel 5 sweeps every visible value into a single payout. Wilds sit on the middle three reels and substitute for everything except scatters, Money, and Collect. There's a 5×3 grid running 243 ways, RTP sits at 96.49%, and the variance is medium, so you'll see steady action between bigger hits rather than long dry spells.
Free Spins is where the design earns its keep. You start with 6 spins, and each scatter that triggered the round activates its own modifier. Phoenix glues x2 and x3 multipliers to reels 1 and 2. Dragon stacks x3, x5, and x3 across reels 2, 3, and 4. Tiger handles the right side with x3 on reel 5 and x2 on reel 4. The Fish modifier is bonus-only and the most chaotic. It scatters 3 to 6 random multipliers across the grid, multiplying anything already there. A single position can theoretically reach x100,000, which is wild on paper but realistically capped by the 10,000x max win ceiling.
For players who can't be bothered grinding for triggers, there's an Ante Bet at 60x that quadruples natural bonus frequency, a Buy Free Spins button at 100x for 1 to 3 random modifiers, and a 400x Super Free Spins that locks in all three modifiers and guarantees a Fish wipe across all 15 cells. Super Spin (also 400x) replaces normal play with a single ultra-charged spin where any pot can fire mid-reel.
One gripe? The visual design leans hard on Pragmatic's stock Asian-prosperity template, so if you've played a few of these before, the lanterns and gold coin showers won't surprise you. The maths, though, is sharper than most.