Paylines
30 paylines (player-selectable 1-30)
Genii's Trick Or Treat drops you onto a moonlit suburban street where bare gnarled branches frame a haunted Victorian house and costumed kids work the reels. It's a 5×3 grid running 30 paylines (adjustable down to 1, if you really want that kind of control), and the entire symbol set is themed. No card royals. No A-K-Q-J filler. Just ghosts in painted sheets, a Little Red Riding Hood with a smirk that's almost unsettling, a hockey-mask kid who looks lifted straight out of Friday the 13th, swirly lollipops, fake-blood bottles with vampire fangs, and a glowing Jack-o-lantern carved with WILD across its face.
The Pumpkin Wild substitutes for everything except the Free Spins scatter, and it pays its own combos too. Land five and you'll grab 100 coins. Modest, sure, but that's not where the real money lives. The top symbol, that bulging candy-and-treats bag, pays 6,000 coins for five-of-a-kind at maximum bet. The hockey-mask kid follows at 3,000. The RTP sits at 97.17%, which is genuinely high for a Saucify-era Genii build, where most peers hover in the 95-96% range.
Hit three or more scatters anywhere and Free Spins kick in: 10 spins for three, 15 for four, 20 for five. Every win during the round is doubled, and the feature can retrigger. Bet stays locked to your triggering spin, so this is one of those games where pushing the bet a bit higher before chasing scatters actually changes how the math plays out.
And then there's the Gamble. After any win you can tap the side button and try to double up by picking red or black, or quadruple by guessing the suit. You can keep gambling until you hit the win ceiling or bust. Stack a five-of-a-kind top symbol with the Free Spins x2 multiplier and four successful suit-gamble flips, and you're theoretically staring at 48,000 coins per spin. Theoretically. Most sessions won't go that way.
The mood lands closer to Halloween-comedy than horror. Bet range is wide ($0.01 to $37.50), so it's playable as a casual seasonal spin or a more committed grind. The 3D-rendered character models do show their 2015 release vintage if you look closely, but honestly the dripping green logo and committed theme carry it.