Provider
Yggdrasil Gaming
Yggdrasil's Incinerator drops you inside a grimy space junkyard where worn-out parts get melted down for scrap. The 5×3 cabinet sits between rusted girders and conveyor belts, and there's a furnace mouth glowing orange behind the reels. It's an oddly satisfying setting. Symbols look like industrial cylinders rather than cards or fruits, with a gold gear pack sitting at the top of the paytable.
The mechanic is Avalanche, not spinning reels. Symbols drop in from above, winners vanish, fresh ones tumble down to fill the gaps, and the chain keeps going until nothing else lines up. With 20 fixed paylines and a 96.1% RTP, you're looking at a low-volatility cascade slot. Hit frequency is high in practice because every cascade is another shot at the same bet.
Here's where it gets interesting. Land 3 consecutive cascade wins on a single spin and the Wild Pattern activates. A preview grid on the left UI panel shows exactly which cells will turn into wilds, so you know what's coming. The first trigger in a round is usually the Normal pattern with a small chance of upgrading to Super. Every subsequent trigger in that same round is always Super. Pattern repeats every 3 extra cascade wins, so a really hot spin can stack multiple wild waves.
And that's basically it. There are no free spins, no scatters, no buy bonus, no jackpots. Just cascades and the wild trigger. Honestly, that's the one knock against the game, since players coming from feature-stuffed modern releases might find the structure a bit thin. But the upside is pace. Spins resolve quickly, the cascade chains feel rewarding even when the win is small, and the soundtrack of clanking machinery suits the loop.
The max win sits at 300x total bet, which is a low ceiling by today's standards. You won't catch any 5,000x screenshots here. But the 300x cap pairs with the low variance to give a steadier session, and bets run from 0.20 up to 200 per spin so it scales for casual and bigger stakes alike. Released back in January 2016, Incinerator still holds up if you like cascade mechanics with a clean industrial aesthetic. Worth a few rounds, especially if you're tired of overproduced fantasy themes.