Habanero leaned hard into the 1980s here, and the result is one of the studio's more unusual cabinets. A Miami sunset spills across the screen in orange and pink, with palm-tree silhouettes lining the boardwalk and a tiled skyline glowing under twin sunbeams. The royals are chunky synthwave letterforms in blue and purple chrome, which fits the era better than most retro-themed slots manage. There's no DeLorean on the reels, which feels like a deliberate joke once you spot the time-travel control panel sitting near the Scatter symbol.
The grid runs a classic 5×3 layout with 243 bothways evaluation. That means every spin reads left to right and right to left, doubling the directional paths without inflating the stake. Bets start small at 0.15 a spin and stretch all the way to 5,000, with operator-configurable RTP defaulting to 96.68%. Volatility sits at medium, which is a touch surprising given the headline number on the max win.
And the max win is the headline. 56,390x on a medium-volatility 5×3 is genuinely uncommon, and it stems from how three features stack. First, the Money Re-Spin: gold cassette-tape Money symbols carry random cash values from 2x up to 2,888x, and three or more triggers a hold-and-win round where only Money symbols and blanks fall. Each new cassette resets the counter, and filling all fifteen positions adds a flat 10x multiplier to the collected sum. Second, Free Games scale generously. Three Scatters give you 10 spins, four give 20, and five reach 100, which is a high tier by any studio's standards. Random prize doubling fires inside the round.
The signature mechanic is Rewind. Wins from prior Free Games rounds get stored on a Saved Games rail above the bet bar, and 3 to 5 Rewind symbols on a future paid spin replay 1 to 3 of those stored outcomes as fresh results. It's stateful, meaning the cabinet remembers your session across spins, and it's the only path to chaining bonus rounds in this fashion. A Buy Feature shield sits dead center between Minor and Grand random progressive jackpot meters, both of which can drop without symbol triggers on any paid spin. The four-stage Buy UI is more elaborate than most Habanero cabinets, which is either thorough design or a minor hassle depending on how much you like clicking through confirmation screens.
This is an official Habanero partner release on Respinix.