Slots look like the simplest game in the casino. Press spin, watch the reels, hope they line up. On the surface, that's exactly what they are. But underneath every slot sits a handful of numbers and terms that quietly decide how the game behaves — how often it pays, how big those wins can get, and what your money is realistically doing over time. Learn to read them and you'll pick slots that suit you, instead of spinning blind.
MrWager.com reviews slots with all of this spelled out — RTP, volatility and features, game by game — but it pays to know what you're actually looking at first. Here's the short course.
RTP: the number that matters most
RTP stands for Return to Player, and it's the single most useful figure on any slot. It's the share of all wagered money a game is built to pay back over the long run. A slot with 96% RTP returns, on average, 96 units for every 100 staked across millions of spins.
Two things to hold onto. Higher is better — most slots sit between 94% and 97%, so anything north of 96% is quietly doing you a favour. And RTP is a long-run average, not a promise for your session. You can lose on a 98% slot and hit big on a 94% one in a single sitting. Over thousands of spins the maths holds; over twenty, anything goes.
Volatility: how the wins arrive
If RTP is how much a slot pays back, volatility — sometimes called variance — is how it pays it back. It's the rhythm of the game.
Low-volatility slots pay often but small. Wins land regularly, your balance ticks along, and the ride is smooth — ideal if you want a longer session or you're clearing bonus wagering. High-volatility slots flip that completely: long dry spells broken by rare, much bigger hits. The top prizes are huge, but you need patience and enough bankroll to survive the gaps between them. Medium volatility splits the difference.
Neither is better. It's about temperament and budget. Match the slot to how you like to play.
How slots pay: paylines, ways and Megaways
Older slots use paylines — fixed patterns across the reels, where matching symbols have to land on a line to pay, usually left to right. A game might have 10, 20 or 50 of them.
Newer slots often drop lines entirely. Ways-to-win games (think "243 ways") pay whenever matching symbols land on adjacent reels, wherever they sit. Megaways takes it further: the reels change height every spin, opening up to 117,649 ways to win on a single game. And cluster pays ditch reels-and-lines altogether — you win by landing groups of touching symbols. Same goal, different machinery.
The features that make slots interesting
The base game is only half the story. The features are where the real money — and the fun — lives:
Wilds substitute for other symbols to complete wins. Scatters pay or trigger bonuses no matter where they land, and usually they're your ticket into free spins. Free spins are the headline bonus round on most slots, often loaded with extras. Multipliers boost a win 2x, 3x, 10x or more. And bonus rounds — pick-me games, prize wheels, hold-and-win grids — are where many slots stash their biggest payouts.
When you read a slot's rules, you're really asking one question: how do I get into the features, and what happens when I do?
Bonus buy: paying to skip the wait
Some slots let you skip straight to the bonus round for a fixed price — a bonus buy or feature buy, often costing around 100x your stake or more. Tempting, especially on a high-volatility game where the free spins are the whole point.
Two warnings. It's expensive, and it burns through a bankroll fast — a few buys can empty an account in minutes. And the RTP on a buy isn't automatically better than normal play. Worth knowing, too: bonus buys are banned in several regulated markets, so you won't see them everywhere.
How to size up a slot before you spin
Every slot hides a cheat sheet behind the info button — the little "i" in the corner. Open it before you commit. You'll find the RTP, often a volatility rating, the max win (usually shown as a multiple of your stake, like 5,000x), and exactly how the features trigger.
That max-win figure is the one new players skip and shouldn't. A high-volatility slot capped at 50,000x is a completely different animal from one capped at 1,000x — same genre, wildly different ceilings.
The bottom line
You don't need to memorise maths to play slots well. Learn five things — RTP, volatility, how the game pays, what the features do, and where the max win sits — and you go from spinning blind to choosing games that actually fit your budget and your mood. The reels still do what they like on any given spin. But at least you'll know what you're sitting down to.
