Paylines
20 fixed paylines
The first thing you notice about Ocean's Call is that the premium symbols are not symbols in any normal sense. They are full oil-painted portraits of Sirens and Harpies, and each one takes up the entire three-row height of a reel when she lands. Six of these mythological women rotate through the top-pay slots, all rendered like late Pre-Raphaelite gallery pieces, all spilling out of the ornate brass cabinet that frames the 5×3 grid.
Mechanically the engine still treats each cell as its own symbol ID, so when a full-column Siren drops on reel one and a matching segment lands on reel two, every payline crossing those positions counts as a 3-of-a-kind. That math is where the wins get dense. Habanero's own telemetry from this game shows a single spin paying 14 lines at once on the same Siren character, all triggered from a clean stack on two-and-a-half reels. It is a low-bet line slot on paper, but the picture-frame architecture quietly turns ordinary stacks into multi-line pileups.
The structure underneath stays loyal to the 2016 Habanero playbook. Twenty fixed paylines, a Wild restricted to the inner reels, three or more Scatters opening a Free Spins round that can retrigger from inside itself, and a card-suit Gamble sitting next to every win. No Buy menu, no Ante, no shortcut into the bonus, which keeps the demo feel honest. Two random progressive jackpots, Grand and Minor, sit above the cabinet and can trigger on any paid spin from a shared network pool.
One honest gripe: the certified 98% RTP tier is operator-discretionary, and most casinos run the standard 95.45% build instead. Worth checking the cabinet before you commit real stakes. Volatility lands in the medium band, hits come often, but the heavy paydays really do need that full-column Siren to cooperate. The painting is the reason to come back. Aegean cliffs, marble columns, brass shell-motif corners, everything reads less like a slot screen and more like a five-panel Homeric oil triptych you wandered into by accident.