The math here lives inside the xWheel, and the trap with the xWheel is sitting on a dead segment. Three Bonus symbols on reels 1, 3 and 5 fire the round. You spin a wheel with ten value pockets plus a Level Up pocket, you collect whatever pocket the arrow stops on, and that pocket goes dark for the rest of the round. Hit a dark pocket on a later spin and the round ends. Hit Level Up and the entire wheel swaps for a heavier-paying one with its deactivation count reset, which is the only way the run actually grows. Three wheels stacked vertically, three Jackpot tiers nested inside them at 100x, 250x and 2,500x the bet, and any Jackpot result closes the round immediately.
Most studios bury the Gamble odds in a help screen. Nolimit prints theirs on the rules page, and the read is unusually clear. The 50/50 card flip (Spade or Heart, double or nothing) is the higher-RTP path. The Wheel of Bonus Gamble, which throws an arrow at a colored band hoping to win the xWheel feature outright, looks bigger but the expected value sits below the card flip. Both fire after any winning base spin. Both can be switched off by operators in UK, Germany and other regulated markets, so the feature isn't a guarantee depending on where you load the demo from. There's also a direct xWheel buy in the menu, and at roughly -2% RTP it's one of the cheapest feature buys in the Nolimit catalogue, which says something about how the studio rates the wheel's variance versus its base math.
Ten symbols, no card-rank lows at all. Red Sevens, watermelon and strawberry sit as the high tier, then cherries, plums, oranges, lemons and grapes fill the mids, with a blue Diamond Wild on the middle three reels and a gold Wheel of Bonus on reels 1, 3 and 5. That alternating Bonus pattern matters because it pushes the trigger rate closer to a normal Scatter, not the lottery-ticket frequency NLC usually runs. The cabinet is chrome with neon pink and blue piping, a side lever, a blue dot-matrix marquee flashing the 100/250/2,500 ladder, and a red disco grid pulsing behind the whole frame.
The 2,500x ceiling does feel light when you remember Nolimit's other slots routinely reach 30,000x or higher. Calling this extreme-volatility in the same breath as Mental or Tombstone R.I.P. is a stretch on that number, although the wheel's deactivation does create real swings inside the bonus. As a retro fruit machine cosplay with one inventive bonus and an honest Gamble layer, it works.