Step right up. GameArt drops you into a night fairground where the big top has clearly seen better days, and the acts are worse. A red devil ringmaster, a fanged vampire-clown, a contortionist with purple hair, a zombie strongman and a gold gargoyle make up the headline cast on a 5×3 grid. The card royals underneath (A, K, Q, J) come blood-spattered and scratched, because of course they do.
There are no fixed paylines here. Circus of Horror pays on 243 ways, so matching symbols only need to sit on adjacent reels from the left. That makes the leftmost reels matter most, and it means small wins land more often than a payline grid would give you.
The headline feature is the Electric Chair. Land three Vampire bonus symbols and the reels drop away to reveal a strapped-in victim and nine glowing X-ray panels of body parts. You press the button, the body jolts, and a panel reveals a cash prize. It's a pick game, honestly, just wrapped in a grim torture-show skin. No skill, only nerve.
Two random features add the unpredictability. One can fire on any base spin without warning. The other rides along inside the free spins round, which awards up to 15 spins and can throw its own surprise mid-round. None of it runs on a meter, so the game leans on sudden hits rather than slow build-up. Impatient? The feature is buyable for roughly 50x your stake, and any win can be pushed through GameArt's usual card gamble for double-or-nothing.
The maths read 96.20% RTP at high volatility, with a ceiling around 1,108x. That top end feels modest for a horror slot in 2026, and there's no jackpot pool to sweeten it. But the theme carries the weight. Spin the demo above and meet the freak show yourself.