Demo slot Hey Sushi

Hey Sushi Slot – Free Demo

Provider: Habanero
The crab sat on the centre reel between tamago and a shrimp tempura stack, the Jackpot Race timer overhead ticking toward its next drop. Hey Sushi wraps a cascade-and-multiply engine inside a sushi-bar cabinet, 5×3 with 25 fixed paylines, and layers a progressive race mechanic across the top that…

Play Hey Sushi demo

Developed by Habanero
Game details
Provider Habanero
Volatility High
Max Win Per Spin 1,304x
Min Bet 0.01
Reels 5
Bonus Buy No
Increasing Multipliers Yes

What that countdown timer is chasing

The Jackpot Race runs across the top of the cabinet as a timed progressive meter, counting down toward a drop that any active player can win. It is the first thing the grid shows you, before you register the cascade mechanic or the multiplier strip below it. Most 5×3 cascade slots lean on a free-spins trigger as the draw. Hey Sushi puts a race-against-the-clock progressive on top instead, and the shift it creates is real: the reason to keep spinning moves from building toward a trigger to watching a timer that is already running.

Underneath the race, a ×1 through ×5 multiplier strip climbs with each consecutive cascade inside a single paid spin. The published feature list also includes free spins triggered by scatters, where the multiplier ladder extends further, but the Jackpot Race is the piece that separates this grid from the rest of Habanero's cascade catalogue. A progressive timer paired with a fixed-step multiplier on a compact grid gives it a different pulse from slots that rely on feature rounds alone for their ceiling.

The Minty Take: Hey Sushi suits players who want their cascade grid active between feature triggers. The Jackpot Race timer adds tension most food-themed slots lack, and the ×5 multiplier cap keeps base-game wins grounded. The variance is high and the return is configurable by operator, so the session shape will shift by site.

The ×5 ceiling on a cascade chain

Winning combinations clear from the grid and new symbols drop in. Each consecutive cascade steps the multiplier from ×1 up to a ×5 cap on the fourth tumble. That ceiling is lower than slots that let multipliers run open, and it signals where the maths concentrates the upside. The payoff is not in one runaway chain but in how the cascade feeds the race timer and what the free-spins round layers on top.

Hey Sushi idle grid showing the 5×3 layout with Jackpot Race timer and multiplier strip

The layout is 25 fixed paylines on a 5×3 grid, all live on every spin, wins reading left to right. Every winning line clears and the cascade replaces what was removed. Short chains are common. The longer ones are where the ×5 step earns its keep, turning a third or fourth tumble into something the flat line pays alone would not produce.

Rice royals, a beer mug, and the crab on top

The low-paying symbols are 9 through A, each moulded from coloured rice and served on a sushi plate. They fill the grid and they pay accordingly. Above them sit sushi rolls and rice bowls in the mid tier, with a beer mug alongside. The premiums narrow to two: shrimp tempura sitting just below the red crab, which tops the paytable. That hierarchy is easy to read at a glance, and on a cascade grid where symbols are constantly clearing and dropping back in, legibility counts.

Red crab premium symbol on the centre reel among tamago and tempura plates

The wild substitutes for everything except the scatter and lands on the central reels. Three scatters open the free-spins round, where the multiplier ladder extends past the base game's ×5 ceiling. That extension is where the published high-variance label points: the base game grinds through short cascade chains while the larger upside sits behind the trigger. Habanero lists the return as configurable, which means the RTP active on a given site depends on the operator's build.

Base game grid with card-rank lows and food-plate symbols across five reelsJackpot Race progressive banner with countdown timer above the reels

The wooden counter after the reels stop

Strip away the Jackpot Race and the multiplier strip and what sits underneath is a clean cascade slot with a food-court skin that holds up. The wooden sushi-bar frame holds the cartoon crab at the top of the paytable and the rice-plate card ranks at the bottom in one unbroken aesthetic. Habanero released it mid-2020, and the artwork still reads sharper than it needs to. The crab on the centre reel, flanked by tempura and tamago, the timer overhead counting down to something you cannot predict, is the frame that stays after you close the tab.