Demo slot Greedy Goblins

Greedy Goblins Slot – Free Demo

Provider: Betsoft
Three yellow "Welcome to Elfania" signs landed across the middle row a fair way into my session at the goblin treehouse. The little thieves at the foot of the screen broke into a cheer, and the ten free spins those signs bought handed back 3.60 on the 0.90 I had riding each spin, a four-times…

Play Greedy Goblins demo

Developed by Betsoft
Game details
Provider Betsoft
Min Bet 0.02/0.5
Reels 5
Bonus Buy No
Increasing Multipliers No

The reels stayed loud while the balance stayed flat

I sat down at the goblin treehouse with a 1,000-credit balance and 0.90 spread across the 30 lines of the 5x3 grid. For the first long stretch the green win counter barely stopped flickering, and almost none of it amounted to much: a Wanted poster cluster worth 0.15, then a short line of goblets paying 0.30. Stacked moons returned less than a tenth of the stake. The wooden door wild from Betsoft's 2013 forest slot would anchor a centre reel now and then and nudge a hit up to 1.80, twice the bet, but the drift was downward. The balance slid toward 890 before the reels did anything I would call an event.

A short line of goblets across the centre reels paying 0.30A Wanted poster cluster across the middle three reels

Then came the Elfania signs. Three landed across the middle row and added ten free spins to the count, the goblins celebrating as they did. That first feature was a polite one: the multiplier badges stayed quiet and the round closed at 3.60, four times the stake, lifting the balance a little off its low. Small, but it was the first time the treehouse paid me back for sitting there.

Free Spins reels with a 1.80 line win lit and goblins cheeringA goblin holding up a 3.60 Prize Earned placard

Minty's Final Note: Greedy Goblins is built for a player who wants the reels busy and the stakes gentle. It is not the slot for hunting a big swing. The base game chatters along in small line pays, and the two free-spins rounds are where it earns its keep, the better of mine worth 14 times the stake. The progressive jackpot and the pick bonus both stayed mostly out of reach across my run, so treat them as garnish rather than the reason to sit down. If you need the reels to threaten a real number between features, this forest plays too tame.

A pick bonus I never got to open

The Wanted posters that had been small change all session suddenly had a second job. Land enough of them and they wake up the Idea Stealer, a goblin who pops up cackling "Hehe! All the ideas are mine!" over a Begin Bonus prompt, inviting you to start picking through the elves' workshop for hidden prizes. It is the one feature I came away from with no number against it; the round surfaced once and the session rolled on before I got into the picking itself. So I can tell you it exists and how it opens. What it pays, I never found out.

The Idea Stealer goblin over a Begin Bonus prompt

Underneath that, the base game kept its steady patter. The blue gem resting on a stack of coins filled the grid more often than any other symbol. The door wild took the odd turn anchoring the centre, though plenty of settled grids of goblets and mushroom houses simply paid nothing. Up above the reels the Greedy Jackpot ticker sat at 1,875 from my first spin to my last and never so much as twitched, so the progressive everyone is nominally chasing stayed a number on a sign.

The treehouse grid at load with the jackpot ticker reading 1,875
A base grid of posters and moons with no winning lineStacked moons paying 0.06 with the Double Up button showing

Ten more free spins, and this time the multipliers turned up

Three Elfania signs dropped again later on, worth another ten spins, and the second round had the teeth the first one lacked. The multiplier badges latched onto symbols as they landed and stacked onto the wins running through them. One climbed to 10x, and the counter settled at 12.60. That is 14 times the 0.90 stake, the biggest single return across all 342 spins. It pushed the balance up to its high near 1,050.

Three Welcome to Elfania signs awarding plus ten free spinsFree Spins grid with multiplier badges of up to 10x on the symbols
A goblin holding up a 12.60 Prize Earned placard

From that peak the run did what it had done all along, only in reverse. The reels eased back into their small-pay rhythm, a 0.45 here on a stack of moons and the odd grid that returned nothing. I closed the session at 994.75, a hair under the 1,000 I had started with, near enough to break-even that the two free-spins rounds and the long base-game grind had cancelled each other out.

Stacked moons with the Book of Secrets in the bottom rowThe final settled grid with gem stacks across the top row

Where the swings actually live

Across 342 spins the features kept a steady but stingy cadence: two free-spins rounds and the single pick bonus that came and went. That cadence is what shapes how the variance feels. Small pays land often enough that the balance never lurches, so the floor of the game is gentle and rarely cold. The cost of all that comfort is that the genuine swing hides in exactly one place, behind three Elfania signs, and the bigger of my two rounds still only stretched to 14 times the stake. The jackpot ticker, frozen at 1,875 the whole way, was never part of the conversation. Work out how seldom those three signs tend to drop and you have the honest measure of the slot: a busy, low-pressure sitting with its one real lift parcelled out to the free spins.