Paylines
40 fixed paylines
Evoplay dropped Flame of Ra in June 2026, and it lands exactly where you'd expect an Egyptian slot to land. Sun-god Ra, pyramids, the Eye of Horus. The reels sit inside a golden temple panel pinned against a daytime Nile riverbank, palm fronds in the foreground, sandstone ruins baking in the distance. A falcon-headed Ra statue crowns the top. It's warm, it's gold-and-turquoise, and it's familiar. Maybe a little too familiar, but we'll get to that.
Mechanically you're looking at a 5×4 grid with 40 fixed paylines, all paying left to right. The headline symbol is Ra himself, the falcon-headed god, who works as the Wild. He substitutes for everything except the Scatter, and he arrives stacked, so a single reel can fill top to bottom with him. That stacking is where most of the bigger base-game hits come from. The Scatter is a glowing blue Free Spins disc that pays from any position.
Free spins are the core feature, and the math is simple. Land three Scatters for 10 spins, four for 20, five for 30. They retrigger too, since 3+ Scatters during the round add more. Don't want to grind for them? Evoplay built in a Bonus Buy with three tiers: 10 spins for 21x your bet, 20 spins for 42x, or 30 spins for 63x. Linear pricing, no surprises.
The numbers: RTP sits at 95.54% in the base game, climbing slightly on the buy options. Max win is 1,450x, and I'd peg volatility as medium-high, though that's an estimate since the game's too new for a published rating.
So here's the honest bit. Flame of Ra is competent and clean, but it doesn't try anything you haven't seen a hundred times. No expanding symbols in the bonus, no multiplier wilds, just stacked Wilds and retriggers. And that 1,450x ceiling? It's modest for this genre. If you want a no-fuss Egyptian free-spins slot with a buy button, it delivers. Chasing something fresh, look elsewhere.