A card table layout and fast outcomes define this Spinberry release, where card ranks form numeric multipliers rather than traditional symbol pays. The optional side bet adds poker style patterns, but it follows a strict ten times minimum rule against the main wager. On BetVictor, it sits among slot games that favour simple reading, since the reels stay compact and the pay method remains easy to track. Pips break chains.
Dark felt tones and sharp card faces keep the presentation close to a blackjack table, with suits providing the main colour contrast. The reels use large ranks so values look clear during quick spins, and the interface avoids decorative clutter. Short flashes mark winning lines, while side bet hits highlight the involved cards to show the exact pairing or sequence. Audio leans on brief chip and card cues rather than long loops. A help panel clarifies combinations, so rules stay obvious at speed. Lighting stays muted to protect symbol clarity.
2 Cards | 3 Cards | Combination |
30x |
| Mixed Pair, same rank, different suits |
60x |
| Coloured Pair, same rank, same colour |
100x |
| Perfect Pair, same rank, same suit |
| 200x | Flush, same suit |
| 400x | Straight, sequential ranks |
| 1200x | Trips, three of a kind |
| 1600x | Straight Flush |
| 4000x | Trips Flush |
The side bet checks win lines for two card and three card hands, then pays the listed multiplier on the side bet amount. It can pay alongside a line multiplier win, since both checks resolve after the reels stop. The ten times minimum means the optional wager often drives risk. The paytable focus stays on pairs, straights, flushes, and trips rather than symbol values.
Cards from two to ten count at face value, Ace counts as one, and Jack, Queen, and King count as ten. Adjacent ranks on a paying line join into one figure, which becomes the multiplier for that line win. A ten value card followed by a two forms 102x on a qualifying line. Pip symbols matter because they break a chain and stop separated ranks combining.
After a win, Gamble lets the result ride on a colour or suit prediction for a drawn card. Correct colour doubles the selected return, while correct suit applies a higher multiplier. The sequence ends on a wrong call or when limits apply. It remains optional and only appears after eligible wins.
Each round uses three reels and three rows, with five fixed win lines that keep the screen quick to read. A paying run can begin on the first reel or the second, then it must continue across neighbouring positions as the line moves left to right. When the cards qualify, the game treats them as values and writes them into one multiplier figure for that line outcome, using ten for Jack, Queen, King, and 10, and one for Ace. Pip icons act like dividers, so two strong cards split by a pip do not join into the same number. Compared with many casino games, the outcome settles without extra decisions once the spin starts.
The main draw here is the card to number method, since each qualifying line turns visible ranks into a single multiplier rather than paying through a classic symbol ladder. The three reel format keeps rounds short, and the five line setup makes it easy to check outcomes without scanning a large grid. The side bet layer adds poker style hands, but the ten times minimum rule means the optional wager has a clear impact on session budgeting. Visuals stay practical, with large ranks and restrained effects. Spinberry keeps features limited, so rules remain easy to remember over longer play.