Casino Bonuses

| Provider | Big Time Gaming |
| Reels | 4 |
| Rows | 4 |
| Paylines | 256 |
| Bonus Rounds | 4 |
| Bet Range | 0.20 - 15 |
| Volatility | High |
| Max Win | 28,600x |
| Bonus Buy | Yes |
| RTP | 96.58% |
| Our Rating | 4.5 |
Latest Slots

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review

Demo & Review
Slot Overview
Monopoly Rush Hour is yet another new Monopoly release from Big Time Gaming (BTG), and here, the classic board game is transformed into an interactive, feature-driven casino game, but is it any good? BTG’s previous two Monopoly games have been a bit of a letdown, so can their third be the redeeming one? Let’s find out.
Theme & Design
Monopoly Megaways and Monopoly Deluxe were both highly anticipated Big Time Gaming releases, yet neither delivered what players were hoping for. Many found them boring, slow-paced, and, frankly, a huge letdown, especially when compared to hits like Monopoly: The Big Event.
Once again, BTG has placed the reels at the centre of a living Monopoly board surrounded by streets, stations and utilities. The visuals are OK, but they still have that slightly dated look and feel to them, although this is more to do with BTG’s style than anything game-specific.
You’ll see a wide variety of familiar-looking symbols, with playing card values, including 10, jack, queen, king, and ace, making up the low-value symbols and Monopoly tokens like the dog, car, boat, and top hat acting as the high-value ones.

Monopoly Rush Hour Gameplay & Bonus Features
Monopoly Rush Hour uses a 4-reel, 4-row layout with a 256 ways-to-win mechanic. You can wager from €0.20 up to €15 per spin. The game offers an above-average RTP of 96.51%, although lower settings are available, too.
The core mechanic is the Monopoly board gameplay. On each spin, tokens start from their corner positions, while houses and hotels are placed randomly across the board. Dice can land on specific symbols, moving the corresponding token forward, and for every three spaces moved, that token’s multiplier increases by +1, with random boosts capable of pushing multipliers even higher. Landing on properties with houses or hotels awards instant cash prizes, multiplied by both your stake and the token’s current multiplier.
Now, you’ll also see Chance and Community Chest spaces. When these are landed on, cards can move tokens forwards or backwards, award instant cash prizes, boost multipliers, or trigger free spins.
The Free Spins bonus itself is triggered only by the Chance or Community Chest spaces, so there are no Scatter symbols to land, which can feel slightly odd. Once triggered, you receive 12 spins, with additional spins available through retriggers.
Now, when you trigger the bonus, the token positions, multipliers, houses and hotels that you built in the base game all carry over into the bonus, so it’s a classic case of a bonus round you don’t really want to trigger until the setup is good enough. Landing on train stations awards a re-trigger, while landing on utilities awards higher instant-win cash prizes.
Power Play & Feature Buy
Power Play can be activated at a cost of 8x your stake, and this guarantees dice rolls while also increasing the frequency of higher multipliers and bonus triggers. You can also buy directly into the free spins for a cost of 110x your bet.
Pros
- Engaging board game mechanics.
- Very high maximum win potential of 28,600x.
- Persistent mechanics during the bonus round.
Cons
- VERY similar to previous Monopoly BTG releases.
- Base game wins are pretty poor.
Monopoly Rush Hour Slot Review Final Thoughts
Look, we firmly believe that Big Time Gaming has wasted a huge amount of potential with their Monopoly games. One of the world’s most recognisable and popular franchises SHOULD have been an easy “win” for the Aussie-based studio, but their previous releases really messed things up, in our opinion.
Monopoly Rush Hour is mildly better, but the same core issues remain, in our opinion. While it is indeed a slot, it’s quite easy to forget you’re playing one, as you’re so focused on the tokens, and where they land, but this is neither good nor bad.
What we don’t like is that it feels very familiar to the previous two Monopoly games they’ve pushed out. There’s no real excitement here, for us, and the base game is very poor; wins are low, and you’re basically reliant on triggering the bonus round to hit anything decent.
Yes, the maximum win potential of 28,600x is solid, but like most BTG slots, how often is anyone going to get even remotely close to this? That remains to be seen, but for us, Monopoly Rush Hour isn’t a game we’d play.
Average
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