Picture a neon diamond pulsing pink and gold around three rows of reels, with a young Elvis strumming above the grid. That's the visual hook OctoPlay built around Elvis Presley: Cash is All Right, and it's doing more work than you'd think. The meter framing the grid isn't decoration. It's the entire game.
Mechanically, this is a 5×3 layout with only 5 paylines, which feels almost old-school until you notice everything stacked around the reels. RTP sits at 95.74% on default play, ticking up to 95.84% if you switch on the Double Chance ante (costs 1.30x your stake, doubles the bonus trigger odds). Bets run from 0.10 to 150 EUR. Volatility skews high. The ceiling? 5,500x your bet, which honestly isn't massive compared to what some 2026 releases are pushing, but it's defensible given how the meter does the heavy lifting.
Here's where things get genuinely interesting. A column of nine Cash Prizes runs down one side (base values from 1x up to 10x), and six Jackpot tiers stack on the other, Mini, Minor, Major, Super, Mega, Grand at 1,000x. Blue lightning Cash Boosters drop in the base game and bump those Cash sectors upward, sometimes slapping a x2 or x3 multiplier on top. Yellow lightning does the same for jackpots. The values persist across sessions at your current bet level, which means a quiet grinding session actually builds something. Walk away and your boosted Grand is still waiting.
The payoff trigger is the Hold & Win bonus. Land 5+ Blue Diamonds in one spin, or get lucky on a random trigger, and you're into 3 respins where only Diamonds and blanks land. Each new Diamond resets the spin count. Blue Diamonds pay out a Cash Prize from the meter you've been growing. Gold Diamonds award a Jackpot. Fill all 15 positions and the Grand is yours, full stop.
Is 5 paylines a downside? For some players, yeah, base-game spins feel thin between bonus triggers. But that's clearly intentional. The whole design pushes you toward the meter and the Hold & Win, not toward stacking small line wins. The Elvis branding is officially licensed, the soundtrack leans into rockabilly without leaning too hard, and the persistent state mechanic gives this one a hook that most Vegas-themed slots don't bother with.