Paylines
25 paylines (player-selectable 1-25)
Picture a sun-drenched yacht drifting past quiet headlands, champagne on ice, dolphins skimming the wake. That's the postcard Party On Deck sells, and Genii (under its Saucify-era engine) commits to the cruise fantasy harder than you'd expect from a 5×3 grid with 25 paylines. Bikini tops, champagne buckets with flutes, hot tubs full of silhouetted party guests, sunset balconies. It's tropical-cocktail kitsch played completely straight.
The math is standard once you peek under the hood. RTP sits at the typical Genii default of 96%, volatility runs high, and the top headline reads “WIN UP TO 30,825 COINS.” That's a moderate-high ceiling, not a chase-your-car-payment max win, so set expectations accordingly. Bets stretch from $0.01 up to $62.50, though the game launches at a punchy $50.00 default, which is honestly a bit cheeky for a first-time player. Drop it down before your first spin or your bankroll evaporates faster than the ice in those champagne buckets.
The signature mechanic is the Ship's Wheel feature. Land 3, 4, or 5 scatter wheels anywhere on the reels and you bank a small base of free spins (1, 2, or 3 respectively). Then you spin the actual wheel, and it either tacks on extra free spins or boosts your free-spins multiplier. That second outcome is where the real ceiling lives. You won't get many spins in the bonus, but a stacked multiplier can pay off the top symbol's 2,000-coin five-of-a-kind in a way the base game simply can't.
Wilds only land on reels 2 and 4, and when they hit, they expand to cover the full reel. No self-pay, no extra multiplier, just clean substitutions across the middle of the grid. The paytable runs 11 line symbols deep, which is unusually generous for a Genii title and means more frequent small hits to keep the rhythm steady between feature triggers.
One gripe. The scatter is removed during free spins, so retriggers aren't on the table. You get what the wheel gave you and that's it. For a feature this central to the design, locking out retriggers feels stingy. Still, the boat party vibe carries it, and if you've enjoyed Genii's The Prize Is Right, the wheel mechanic here will feel like a familiar guest.