Temple of Three is Play'n GO doing what they're quietly very good at: stripping a slot down to almost nothing and still making it feel busy. The grid is 3×3. There are five paylines. And honestly, the base game pays so rarely you'll wonder if something's broken. It isn't. The whole machine is built around Hold'n Spin, and once you see it, the rest makes sense.
Here's the loop. A Cash Coin lands, one of three Pots activates, and you get three respins. Every fresh Coin resets the counter back to three. The Pots rotate, which is the part most people miss on first look. Bastet's Multiplier Pot drops Nx frames onto reel positions, so a Coin landing in a 5x slot pays five times its value. Ra's Mystery Pot turns blank tiles into question marks that reveal random Coin values when the feature ends. And Anubis' Enhancer Pot just bumps the tier of every Coin on screen, which is the one you'll quietly pray for.
Two extras worth knowing. The Treasure Keeper can sweep across the grid and snatch every visible Coin into a single payout. The Second Blessing kicks in if your last respin is empty, the game spawns a Coin and hands you fresh respins, basically refusing to let the round die quietly. Jackpot tiers sit at GRAND 100x, MAJOR 50x, MINOR 25x, and MINI 15x of bet. The ceiling is 10,000x, which on a 3×3 grid is ambitious to say the least.
RTP is 96.20%, volatility runs high, and bets range from 0.20 up to 100. The visual side is exactly what you'd expect from Play'n GO at this point, flickering torches, hieroglyphic columns, a stone Pharaoh staring back at you like he's seen this exact session play out a thousand times before.
One honest trade-off. If you don't enjoy slots where the base game is mostly waiting for a Coin to land, this one's going to feel punishing. But when the Pots start chaining and Anubis decides to be generous? It's a different machine entirely. Worth a spin or two to see which side you land on.