Robin Hood: Prince of Tweets is an older NextGen build wearing a slightly silly name over a perfectly straight-faced Sherwood fantasy slot. The grid is the usual 5×3 with 40 fixed paylines, painted in storybook greens and copper letters, and the whole thing hinges on one quirky idea. Robin Hood is the only wild in the game, and he only ever shows up on the middle reel. That single rule shapes every spin.
When Robin does land on reel 3, the Arrow Feature fires off at random. An arrow streaks out and converts adjacent symbols into extra wilds, which is how you get any reach across a 5-reel board from a centre-only wild. Without that feature this game would feel painfully thin. With it, you suddenly see two and three reels lighting up at once from a single trigger. It is a clever bit of design that earns its keep.
The interesting part sits in the SuperBet ladder on the left. Off, the Arrow only ever turns Princess symbols into wilds and the RTP sits at a grim 93.38%. Pay the level 1 ante and the Arrow can hit Princess, Owl and Pouch, lifting RTP to 95.11%. Top step costs more per spin but opens the pool to six symbol types, including Target, Quiver and the Wanted poster, and pushes RTP to 96.97%. You are literally buying symbol-pool width with your stake. Honestly, playing this thing with SuperBet off feels like volunteering for a bad time.
The Castle scatter handles the bonus side. Three, four or five Castles anywhere award 15, 20 or 25 free games, and the trigger pays a separate scatter prize that tops out at a fat 4,000x total bet for the full five. Inside free games the Arrow logic chains further. Newly created wilds can touch fresh symbols and convert those too, which is where the actual chase lives. Retriggers exist, and the spins inherit your trigger bet, so SuperBet status carries through.
And the cap? The full theoretical max sits at 5,662x, which is respectable for a 2015-era build with no Buy Bonus and no progressives. Volatility lands in the medium-high zone, the bet range stretches from one cent up to a frankly enormous $2,500 per spin, and the whole package feels like a relic that aged better than most. Is it flashy by 2026 standards? Not even close. But the centre-reel wild constraint plus the SuperBet trade-off make it surprisingly tactical, and that is more than a lot of newer releases can claim.