Endorphina dropped Burning Hell 3000 on April 23. It's the latest entry in their devil-themed line and slots into a familiar mold: 5×4 reels, 40 fixed paylines, fruit symbols mixed with infernal scenery. The cheeky little demon mascot is back, and this time he's hoarding all the loot.
The setup is classic fruit-slot territory dressed in fire and brimstone. Cherries, sevens, lava, skulls, the works. Endorphina's not pretending it's reinventing the genre, which is honestly refreshing. Sometimes you just want a 5-reel devil game with multiple bonuses.
Speaking of bonuses, there are seven distinct features:
Jackpot Collecting
Pile Feature
Pick Game
Character (the devil himself)
Hold and Win
Wild
Free Games
That's a lot to pack into one slot. Three of those are full-blown bonus rounds, which is generous. Hold and Win plus Jackpot Collecting in the same game means there are essentially two separate paths to the bigger payouts.
Numbers are middle-of-the-road in a good way. RTP at 96.03%, hit frequency 32.26% (so roughly 1 in 3 spins lands something, which is generous), volatility "mid" rather than the punishing "very high" that's everywhere lately. Max multiplier caps at ×1,300. That's modest by today's ×10,000+ standards, but it pairs naturally with the medium volatility. You hit smaller wins more often.
Max bet of €180 is high for a casual slot. Endorphina is clearly leaving room for high-rollers, though most operators will cap that lower based on their own configs.
Honest take? The fruit-meets-devil aesthetic isn't new, and "Burning Hell 3000" is the third in the line, so the visuals lean familiar. If you played the earlier Burning Hells you basically know the look. But the bonus mix has shifted - Pile Feature and Hold and Win combo is the headline addition.
For mid-volatility chasers tired of getting their accounts emptied by very-high-vol slots, this is a sensible pick. Not flashy, not the latest mechanic, but a clean execution of the classic fruit-hell formula with seven actual reasons to keep spinning.
Available now in the Endorphina catalogue.
