Boot up the demo and the first thing that grabs you isn't the cascade engine, it's the four cartoon goblins peeking over the reel tops like nosy neighbours. Each spin they spawn fresh: a pirate with an eyepatch, a green-mohawked punk, an orange tribal lunatic, a purple demon with horns. Match any of them with the same coloured premium that lands directly beneath, and the matched goblin yanks a grenade off its belt, blows itself sky-high, and converts the symbol below into a regular Wild. Hit all four matches on a single drop and the round flips into Evil 4: one goblin gets carted to a stone throne on reel 1, every symbol on that reel counts as four-of-a-kind, and the running multiplier starts at x4 with a +1 step every time another matching goblin appears up top.
That goblin-match layer rides on top of the standard xBomb cascade. xBomb Wilds detonate after every spin whether they're in a winning line or not, wipe adjacent symbols (except Scatters and the Dead Wild row), bump the win multiplier by +1 per blast, and add one row to the grid. So you start at 6×3 with 729 ways and can stretch all the way to 6×7 with 117,649 ways if the cascades chain. There's also a dual-Wild quirk most NLC titles skip. One or two Dead Wilds sit dormant doing nothing, but landing three at once activates them as Resurrection Wilds with the last one carrying a multiplier of its own.
The bonus pathway runs three deep. Three skull Scatters fire Fresh Meat Spins, 8 rounds with guaranteed Dead Wilds on every spin. Trigger Evil 4 during those and the round upgrades to Goblins Feast Spins, where the throned goblin sticks for the rest of the feature with the collected multiplier riding along. Land two xBombs on any bonus trigger and the round flips into Explosive Bonus Mode, guaranteed xBomb on every spin, which forces the grid wide fast.
The 31,969x ceiling is where I push back. For a Nolimit xBomb sequel wearing the Extreme volatility badge, that cap feels light. Fire in the Hole cleared 60,000x a year earlier, so this one is essentially half the runway with twice the moving parts. Visually it's all lava-cave reel frames, torches, and gold coin piles spilling across the floor; the Warhammer-cartoon goblin energy carries the whole package even when the math goes quiet.