Forget reels. Mines Supreme is Hacksaw Gaming's beefed-up sequel to their 2022 Mines original, and it lives squarely inside the Dare2Win picker family. You're not spinning anything. You're tapping tiles on a grid, hoping the next one hides a diamond instead of a bomb, and arguing with yourself about whether to cash out at 1.48x or keep pushing toward 2.04x. Classic risk-versus-reward, but with new toys bolted on.
The grid is yours to shape. Pick 3×3 for a quick nine-tile sprint, 5×5 for the default sweet spot, or jump to 7×7 or 9×9 if you want a longer ladder with up to 81 cells to work through. Then choose how many mines you want sprinkled in. Fewer mines means a flatter multiplier curve and softer payouts. Crank it up to 7 on a 5×5 (or 20 on a 9×9) and every safe pick rewards you harder, but the floor drops out fast. Is 20 mines on the big grid sensible? Probably not. Is it entertaining? Yeah, weirdly so.
Three new tile types separate Supreme from the original. Shields defuse the next Mine you'd otherwise hit, which means one free mistake before you're really in trouble. They only show up if you've armed at least 2 mines, and there are always fewer Shields than Mines, so don't get cocky. Multipliers hit your current collectable win with values from 2x up to a chunky 100x, and any diamonds you grab afterward stack on the boosted total. The headline tile is the Max Win Diamond, which instantly hands over 10,000x your bet and slams the round shut. Doesn't appear often, but it's there.
One catch worth flagging. The demo we tested runs at 86% RTP, which is on the low end even for picker games. Actually, wait, RTP on Dare2Win titles often varies by operator config, so it could climb higher at certain casinos. Worth checking before you commit. Autoplay covers both random and custom click patterns, and the volatility scales with your config, so cautious players can dial it down or chase that 10,000x like it owes them money.