Big Bass Splash key artReel Kingdom / Pragmatic Play · 2022

Fishing and outdoors · Patient high-variance hunters

Big Bass Splash

A fishing-themed scatter-pays slot with free spins and multipliers that can stretch a single catch to 5,000x — high variance, genuine payouts.

RTP
96.71%
Volatility
high
Max win
5,000x stake
Bet range
£0.10 – £250
Free spinsScatter paysMultipliers
YouTube · big winsWatch real Big Bass Splash max-win sessionsCurated streamer footage of bonus rounds and bonus-buy hits.

Big Bass Splash — what every player should know

Overview

Big Bass Splash is a 5×3 fishing adventure from Reel Kingdom and Pragmatic Play. Land scatters anywhere to trigger payouts and free spins; multipliers stack during bonus rounds to hunt that 5,000x ceiling.

How it plays

Ten fixed paylines across a 5×3 grid. Bets run £0.10 to £250, so it suits everything from cautious £0.20 sessions to serious £50-spin runs. High volatility means long droughts between hits, but when bass land, multipliers climb fast.

The bonus round

Three or more scatters trigger free spins where multipliers accumulate on each win. Land more scatters during the bonus and the multiplier resets but spins keep spinning. The 5,000x ceiling arrives when multipliers collide with high-paying symbol clusters — rare, but real.

Who it's for

Anglers chasing big single hits during extended play sessions on modest stakes. High-variance hunters comfortable with 100-spin droughts between decent payouts.

Avoid if

You want frequent small wins or play in short bursts. Big Bass Splash demands patience and a session bankroll; it will test you between bonus rounds.

Frequently asked questions

How do I trigger free spins in Big Bass Splash?

Land three or more scatter symbols anywhere on the 5×3 grid. Scatters don't need to land on paylines — any position counts. More scatters in the trigger award more spins.

Can multipliers reach 5,000x on a single spin?

Multipliers accumulate during free spins and carry across consecutive wins within the bonus. Yes, 5,000x is the theoretical ceiling, but it requires rare alignment of high-paying symbols and stacked multipliers.