by PoggiPlayReleased Dec 19, 2025
Turn-based arcade game where a chicken walks across cooking pots for multipliers up to 5,000x. Four difficulty modes control the risk.


Chicken Curry puts you in control of a nervous cartoon chicken tiptoeing across a row of bubbling cooking pots in a brick-walled kitchen. Each pot displays a multiplier, starting at 1.1x on Easy mode, and the game asks one question after every step: keep going or cash out?
The premise is comedic and the execution matches. An impatient chef lurks in the background, kitchen utensils hang from the walls, spice bottles line the shelves, and the chicken's animations grow increasingly panicked as multipliers climb. The Spine-based character work gives the bird genuine personality - wide eyes, shaking legs, reluctant shuffling forward. It's a small touch that separates Chicken Curry from the flat, static visuals most instant-win games settle for.
The difficulty selector in the bottom-left corner changes everything about the risk profile. Easy mode spreads 20 pots across the kitchen with a ceiling of 250x. Multiplier steps are small (1.1x, 1.2x, 1.3x, 1.5x, 1.8x...) and trap pots appear less frequently. Hardcore compresses the same concept into just 10 pots, starts at 1.6x, and reaches 5,000x, but the failure rate per step jumps dramatically.
Medium tops out at 1,000x and Hard at 2,000x. On Easy, surviving 5-8 steps and cashing out small profits happens regularly. On Hardcore, making it past the third pot feels like an event. The four tiers essentially turn one game into four, and switching between them mid-session keeps the rhythm from going stale.
Place your bet (from €0.50 up to €100), pick a difficulty, and hit GO. The chicken hops to the first pot. Two buttons appear: GO and CASH OUT. No bonus rounds. No free spins. No autoplay. Every round is a fresh decision tree stripped to its minimum components.
Outcomes are predetermined at round start - the chicken's fate is sealed before the first step, and what changes between sessions is where the trap pots land. So the "one more step" temptation is the entire game design. PoggiPlay built this as pure risk/reward psychology with nothing layered on top. Whether that's refreshing or thin depends on your tolerance for simplicity.
This follows Chicken Run, released July 2025, which used the same engine and structure but swapped the kitchen for lily pads and alligators. The core math and difficulty system carried over unchanged. If you played Chicken Run, Chicken Curry offers the same gameplay loop in a new setting.
PoggiPlay is a small Armenian studio with around 30 titles, mostly unconventional slots like Purple Fox and Fuzzy Wuzzy. Their instant-win line (Chicken Run, Chicken Curry, Indiana Mines, Deadly Diamond) represents a 2025 pivot toward the arcade format that's been gaining ground across the industry. The studio distributes through Softswiss and Slotegrator and holds BMM Testlabs certification for RNG fairness.
Chicken Curry enters a packed field - at least 15 chicken-themed stepping games exist now, and this version doesn't introduce any mechanic the category hasn't seen. The cooking theme adds flavor (pun intended), and the four-tier difficulty system gives more player control than most competitors. But it remains a reskin of Chicken Run at its core, and availability at live-money casinos is still limited to a handful of operators like Mostbet and Fresh Casino.
Game data verified by Spinoxy Media Ltd editorial team. RTP and specifications sourced from official provider documentation.