Provider
Blueprint Gaming
The Lost Boys Rapid Fire Jackpots is Blueprint Gaming's officially licensed adaptation of the 1987 Joel Schumacher vampire film, dropped onto a familiar 5×3 grid with 10 fixed paylines in August 2024. The studio leans hard on the Santa Carla mood from the original movie. A blue moon hangs over a boardwalk skyline, a Ferris wheel blurs in the background, and David, Michael, Star, Sam and the Frog Brothers all turn up as high-paying portraits drawn straight from Warner Bros. stills. The royals are painted in that scrawled white horror-movie font, which is a small touch but it sells the period.
Mechanically, this is a Cash Collect slot with a vampire skin. Cash symbols carry stake multipliers up to 20x, and the toothy Collect head on reel 5 sweeps them up whenever it lands. Random base-game modifiers fire off between spins, mostly themed around movie scenes, and you'll see wilds added, mystery transforms or extra bonus symbols depending on which scene plays. Three Bonus scatters drop you into free spins where the Cash Collect mechanic stays live, but the trigger rate sits around 1 in 144 spins, so don't expect them often. Volatility lands in the medium-high band with a 16.66% hit frequency.
The headline act is the Rapid Fire Jackpots overlay running down the left side of the screen. Five flame logos anywhere on the reels spin a wheel that pays either stake multipliers from 5x to 1,000x or one of five network-pooled progressives: Mini, Minor, Major, Master and Mega King. It's a low-value, high-frequency pattern. You'll hit Mini often enough to feel rewarded, but Mega King is genuinely rare.
And here's the catch worth flagging. The base RTP sits at 91.99% (91% plus a 0.99% jackpot contribution), which is noticeably below Blueprint's usual 95% sister version. You're paying a tax on the jackpot dream, basically. Base wins cap at 5,000x your bet on top of whatever the RFJ wheel hands over. Stakes run from 0.10 up to 100 per spin, which is generous for a branded title. If you grew up renting this movie on VHS, the nostalgia hit is real. Just go in knowing the math.