Elvis Presley: Cash is All Right Slot by Octoplay
by Octoplay
Free demo - play instantly in your browser
OctoPlay's Elvis licensed 5x3 slot runs 5 paylines plus persistent Cash Prize and Jackpot meters that grow across sessions via Booster symbols, with a Hold & Win bonus that collects from those meters up to 5,500x. The "Free Play" button below loads the Elvis Presley: Cash is All Right demo instantly in your browser.

Specifications
| Game Type | Slots |
|---|---|
| RTP | 95.74% |
| Volatility | High |
| Max Win | 5,500x |
| Grid | 5x3 |
| Paylines | 5 paylines |
| Min Bet | $0.1 |
| Max Bet | $150 |

About Elvis Presley: Cash is All Right Slot
The thing that makes this one peculiar is the persistence. Both meters around the grid - the column of nine Cash Prize values to the right of the reels, and the six jackpot tiles to the left - grow as Boosters land and stay grown across sessions until something actually collects them. Walk away mid-progress, come back later at the same bet, and your inflated Grand at 1600x with a x3 multiplier strapped to it is still waiting. The values shown on the spin screenshot (Grand 1600x x3, Super 160x, Mini 15x x2, plus a Cash column reading 10x, 5x, 4x x2, 6x, 1x, 2x, 7x x3, 2x, 3x) are not the base state. Those are pre-loaded Starting Boosters that fire once on a fresh save, then the meters drift up from real spins after that.
The Boosters themselves are two lightning symbols that drop on the reels during base play. A blue one feeds the Cash column on the right - up to five sectors get +1x added to their base value, and up to two sectors that haven't been multiplied yet pick up a x2 or x3 tag. The yellow one does the same job on the Jackpot column to the left, with each tier growing by its own increment (Mini +5x, Major +10x, Grand +200x and so on) up to a hard ceiling at double the base. Only one Booster colour can land per spin, so you don't get both columns fed in the same round.
None of those meter values pay out from base play. You only collect them inside the Hold & Win bonus, which fires when a Diamond lands and the trigger roll cooperates, or instantly if 5 or more Diamonds turn up on the same spin (the engine will paste extras in to hit five if it has to). The round opens at 3 respins, only Diamonds and empties land, every Diamond sticks and resets the counter back to 3. Blue Diamonds pay out a Cash sector from the right column at whatever value it's grown to. Gold Diamonds pay out a Jackpot tier from the left column. Land all 15 positions on the grid and the Grand drops automatically, ending the feature. That's the only path to the 5,500x ceiling - a near-full board with the Grand at its inflated, multiplied state plus enough Cash sectors stacked up around it.
There's no direct buy. The closest thing is a Double Chance ante at 1.30x your stake that doubles the odds of any spin triggering the bonus, edging the RTP up by a tenth of a percent. Otherwise you wait on the Diamonds. The 5 paylines on a 5x3 grid feel deliberately stripped down - left-to-right only, the Wild paying 100x for a 5-of-a-kind line, and the lows (A, K, Q, J, 10 with little gold stars stamped on them) all paying identical values, which is unusual enough to flag. The base game isn't really the point. It's a holding pattern between the bonus and a place for Boosters to feed the meters.
The cabinet itself is dressed in pink and purple neon, with a wireframe diamond outline pulsing around the reels and a monochrome cutout of Elvis with his guitar floating above the grid beside his cursive signature. Bells with ELVIS scrawled across them, red 777s, a star-studded drum, and a Crown premium fill the upper paytable. Released early 2026 under the official Presley estate licence - the music-cabinet aesthetic and the persistent-progress hook are doing more work here than the licensing.
Reviewed by Arina, Slots Editor at Spinoxy Media Ltd.