Paylines
40 paylines (player-selectable 1-40)
Don't let the name fool you. Mrs Green's Plant Emporium from Genii looks less like a tidy florist and more like the back room of a horror nursery. Sacks of red pulp slump in wooden crates. A snapping Venus flytrap sits where a daisy should be. Someone left a chainmail glove hanging from a hook, and you can probably guess why.
The setup is classic five-by-three with 40 paylines running left to right. Coin sizes climb in four steps from a cent to a quarter, and bets stretch from a penny up to fifty bucks per spin. That's a friendly range for testing the waters without committing your weekend budget.
The star symbol is Mrs Green herself, dropped in as a triple-high stacked Wild. She substitutes for everything except the scatter and covers an entire reel column when she lands. Here's where things get strange. In the base game, she only appears on reels 2 and 4. The moment you trigger Free Spins, she switches sides entirely and shows up on reels 1, 3, and 5 instead. Wild reels flipping between modes? I've not seen that elsewhere in Genii's catalog, and it changes how wins build during the bonus considerably.
Three or more scatters anywhere on the screen kick off Free Spins. You get 10, 15, or 20 spins for landing 3, 4, or 5 scatters, and every win during the round is doubled. The bonus retriggers too, which adds genuine upside if the scatters keep dropping. Combined with the extra Wild coverage on odd reels, this is where the math actually opens up.
Top payout sits at 2,000 coins per line for five of Mrs Green's premium icon, which jumps to 4,000 with the Free Spins multiplier. Honestly, the headline cap is modest compared to modern releases, and that's the one knock here. If you're chasing five-figure multipliers, look elsewhere. But the volatility lands around medium-high, the bonus retriggers cleanly, and the reel-flip mechanic gives the math model a real personality.
The presentation leans into that creepy-greenhouse aesthetic well. Dim wooden shelves, hand-drawn botanical sketches in the background, dusty cobwebs in the corners. It's older-school Genii visuals, and the atmosphere works better than the bright cartoon styling you'd expect from the title. Worth a few spins if you want something with a twist that isn't just another buy-bonus clone.