Paylines
25 paylines (player-selectable 1-25)
Genii's Roaring 20s drops you straight into a Gatsby-style Manhattan rooftop party. The 5×3 grid floats inside a thick golden art deco frame, with skyscraper silhouettes flanking the reels and lit windows showing tiny dancing couples in the background. It's one of the more committed visual identities in Genii's catalog. Every detail, from the geometric A/K/Q/J letters to the stacked logo with that oversized “20”, buys into the same 1920s decorative language.
Mechanically, this is a 25-payline lines-pay game with a flexible bet menu running from $0.01 to $31.25. RTP sits at the standard 96% for the Genii/Saucify build, and volatility lands in the medium band. The headline cap is where things get honest: 6,605 coins is modest. You won't see a four-figure multiplier headline here, and frankly that's the one real criticism. Modern slots routinely advertise 5,000x or higher, so the ceiling feels a touch dated.
What you do get is layered bonus play. The Wild substitutes for any non-scatter symbol (no self-pay, no multiplier), which keeps it functional rather than flashy. Two separate scatters drive the bigger moments. Three or more FS scatters trigger Free Spins, paying out 10, 12, or 15 spins for 3, 4, or 5 symbols. And yes, the round can retrigger.
Free Spins also unlock the Random Wild, which is honestly the prettiest piece of the game. A champagne-cork-style burst travels across the reels and explodes onto a cell, turning it Wild for that spin. The audio design hints at a 3-stage animation (loop, travel, explode), and it really is the most elaborate Random Wild in this slice of the Genii catalog.
Then there's the Pick a Prize feature, and this one's genuinely unusual. Most Saucify-era picks scale with scatters: more scatters, more picks. Roaring 20s flips it. You always pick one prize, but the menu grows. Land 3 scatters, pick from 3. Land 5, pick from 5 better options. Prize value is multiplied by the triggering bet. Different. Refreshing, actually.
Is it a chase-the-jackpot game? No. Is it a stylish, well-built mid-volatility session slot with two distinct bonus routes? Absolutely.