Grid
5-reel variable 2-3-2-3-2 to 4-3-2-3-4
Paylines
72 Win Ways (variable, expanding)
The grid is the first thing that catches your eye. Five reels arranged 2-3-2-3-2, so the outer columns only show two symbol slots while reels 2 and 4 each hold three. That trapezoid is what gives you the 72-ways count in base play. During the bonus tiers reels 1 and 5 climb to three rows tall in the standard round, and four rows tall in the premium tiers, which is where the active-ways figure really starts moving.
Nolimit stacked three of their x-mechanics on top of that frame. xNudge Wilds are 3-high stacked Roman warrior columns restricted to reels 2, 3 and 4. They always nudge into full view, and each nudge step adds +1 to a Wild multiplier. Multiple xNudge multipliers on the same line add together rather than multiplying, which is the studio's house rule but easy to misread on first watch. The headline feature is Infectious Wilds, which only appear on reels 1 and 5. One Infectious Wild converts every copy of a random low symbol on the middle three reels into a Wild. Two of them convert all low symbols on the middle reels, which is the kind of board wipe that makes 31,000x land at all. xWays Mystery symbols stack on top of that, revealing 2 to 4 copies of a random non-Wild paying symbol when they land.
Three Bonus scatters on the middle reels light up an 8-spin Legion X Spins round on the expanded grid. Add two xWays at the trigger and you skip to Legion X Equestris Spins, 10 spins with the xWays icons stuck in place. Two Infectious Wilds instead routes you to Legion X Fretensis Spins, where the Infectious symbol sticks and fires its low-to-Wild conversion every drop. One of each lands you in Legion X Gemina Spins, the top tier, with both special symbols stuck and both effects firing on every spin. A graded feature buy menu prices the four tiers from -2% to -5% RTP.
The reel frame is dark battlefield timber with an SPQR wreath stamped overhead, a tattered Roman banner hanging on the left and a wax tablet on the right. Centurions, standard-bearers and tribal warriors face off across blue-black wood, and the card lows are Roman numerals xI through xIX rather than the usual 10-J-Q-K-A. The one frustration is the lows. Nine Roman numerals in a row are hard to tell apart at a glance, and a fresh player has to squint to read which one is paying. The 31,000x ceiling sits mid-pack for the studio's higher-variance shelf, comfortably above the 11,000x caps of the lighter slots and well short of the six-figure ceilings on the slasher catalogue.