Burning Hell Demo (Endorphina) Slot Demo & Review

Casino Bonuses

Burning Hell Slot
Provider Endorphina
Reels5
Rows5
Paylines25
Bonus Rounds5
Bet Range0.25 - 100
VolatilityHigh
Max Win5,000x
Bonus BuyNo
RTP96.01%
Our Rating5.0

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Slot Overview

Burning Hell is a high-volatility video slot from Endorphina that merges classic fruit-machine symbols… with a humorous, cartoon-inspired underworld! Played on a 5×4 grid with 25 fixed paylines. There’s plenty of bonus action, including expanding Wild Reels, a Hold & Spin Jackpot Bonus, Free Spins, a Gamble, and a maximum win potential of up to 5,000x! Learn more about the game in this Burning Hell review.

Theme & Design

We’ve seen quite a few game developers produce devil-themed slots, to varying degrees of success. Some, like Big Time Gaming’s Lil’ Devil, have developed somewhat of cult-like followings, with Shady Lady’s Devil’s Finger being another honourable mention.

However, it’s not a theme that every software provider will touch; it’s fairly self-explanatory to figure out why. Clearly Endorphina weren’t deterred by the theme, however, as Burning Hell shows. The game is set within a cartoon-like hell, and you’ll see the devil himself floating above the reels, guarding a pile of gold coins behind him.

To the left and right-hand sides of the reels you’ll see two animated skulls swaying back and forth, and the game’s four jackpots are displayed on the left, too. Sure, Burning Hell isn’t the most creative-looking slot in the world, but what Endorphina has done works.

Burning Hell Slot Endorphina
Burning Hell Slot Endorphina

Burning Hell Gameplay & Bonus Features

Burning Hell is played on a 5-reel, 4-row layout with 25 fixed paylines. You can bet between €0.25 and €100 per spin, and the game offers an RTP of 96.01%, which is pretty much bang-on average. The base game largely revolves around stacked premium symbols, expanding Wilds and chasing one of the two main bonus rounds.

Firstly, the wild symbols; they can land on reels 2, 3, and 4, and when they do, they expand to cover the entire reel IF they form part of a win already. The first bonus, the free spins, is triggered by landing 3, 4, or 5 of the scatter symbols anywhere in view. Doing so awards 10, 15, or 20 free spins,, respectively, and during the free games, wilds ALWAYS expand, even if they don’t initially help to form a win.

The second feature is the “Luck of the Devil” bonus, a Hold & Spin-style round triggered by landing 6 or more Fireball and/or Collector symbols in the base game. Once triggered, the reels are cleared, and left behind are positions where only Fireballs, Collectors and Mystery symbols can land. 

You begin with 3 respins; every time a new special symbol appears, it locks in place and the respin counter resets to 3. Fireballs display bet multipliers, while Collector symbols gather the values of all Fireballs currently on the grid. Mystery symbols reveal either the Min, Mid, or Max Jackpots, while filling all 20 grid positions awards the Ultra Jackpot worth 1,000x.

Finally, there’s a randomly triggered “Lucky Time” feature that can trigger when you land five or fewer Fireballs on the reels. If triggered, it simply adds extra fireballs on the screen, awarding the Hold & Spin feature.

Pros

  • Two different bonus rounds.
  • Expanding Wilds in the base game and bonus.
  • Solid 96.01% RTP with a respectable 5,000x max win.

Cons

  • The theme won’t be for everyone.
  • No Bonus Buy option is available.
  • The game’s Gamble feature runs at a lower RTP than the main game.

Burning Hell Slot Review Final Thoughts

Burning Hell is an OK slot, but it feels, to us, a bit like Starburst, without the re-spins, and WITH the addition of a pretty generic Hold & Spin Bonus. Sure, there’s win potential in both features, and even the base game can produce some semi-decent hits, but there’s nothing that says “wow factor” here, and it feels like a pretty lazy release in our opinion.

Despite a fairly low maximum win potential of 5,000x, the game is volatile, and the base game can be punishing, especially if you don’t land many Expanding Wilds. The free spins bonus is, again, OK, but there are absolutely zero added modifiers here (aside from Wilds always expanding), and the Hold & Spin feature, again, is generic and lacks creativity.

5.0

Average

Author Bio

Alex Smith

Article by Alex Smith

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