Provider
Blueprint Gaming
Paylines
4,096 Ways to Win
Blueprint finally got the HBO paperwork sorted, and the result is a 6×4, 4,096-ways adaptation that actually looks like a Game of Thrones product instead of a knock-off with sword icons. Jon, Cersei, Tyrion, Daenerys and the rest of the Westeros lineup occupy the high-pay slots, and the soundtrack pulls directly from the show. Stake range sits at 0.10 to 10.00, RTP defaults to 94.00% (operators can also serve 92% or 93%, so it's worth peeking at the info screen before you commit), and volatility lands firmly in the high bracket. The advertised ceiling is 17,000x.
Here's the part that genuinely separates this from every other cash-collect slot Blueprint has shipped this year. Five Houses sit on a permanent progression track: Night's Watch, Stark, Baratheon, Lannister, then Targaryen at the top. Each House you unlock rewrites how the cash collect symbol behaves, so the same base game evolves the longer you play. Night's Watch gives you a clean baseline collect. By the time you crack Targaryen, the whole machine has restructured around you, and a bonus map of the Seven Kingdoms switches on, banking permanent upgrades from near-miss scatters. It's a slow-burn meta layer that I haven't really seen executed this neatly outside of Hacksaw's roguelike experiments.
The flagship feature is Iron Throne Spins, triggered by three bonus scatters. Multipliers don't sit on a wheel here. They climb a collect trail: 3 collects bump you to x2, 6 to x3, 9 to x5, and 12 to x10 applied to everything you've banked. Random Dragon modifiers can drop mid-spin too. Dragon Fire seeds wilds across the reels, Dragon Inferno fills the screen with cash values, and Dragon Fury forces an immediate collect. And there's a Longclaw sword random event awarding a flat 5x to 2,500x cash prize, or in rare cases, direct entry to the Super Bonus.
One mild gripe. The progression hook means early sessions on Night's Watch feel a touch flat compared to the late-tier chaos, and grinders who jump providers won't see the payoff. But if you sit with it, this is easily Blueprint's most ambitious licensed release since King Kong Cash Even Bigger Bonus.