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Crazy Time Bonus Rounds

Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, and Crazy Time Bonus compared by trigger chance, listed RTP, volatility, Top Slot effect, and player interaction.

Crazy Time bonus rounds screen with feature symbols and live wheel context

Crazy Time has four bonus rounds: Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, and Crazy Time Bonus. Each sits on its own segment of the 54-segment money wheel, each carries a different trigger chance, multiplier shape, volatility, and amount of user interaction, and each triggers only when the wheel lands on its segment with an active bet.

The phrase Crazy Time bonus can mean two different things. This page covers the in-game feature rounds. Casino bonus offers covers operator promotions such as deposit matches, free chips, wagering terms, and live-game eligibility.

Crazy Time bonus rounds: six fast answers
Four bonus rounds
Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, Crazy Time Bonus
Total bonus segments
9 of 54, or 16.67% of the wheel
Most frequent listed bonus
Coin Flip at 4 of 54 segments
Rarest listed bonus
Crazy Time Bonus at 1 of 54 segments
Highest listed ceiling
Crazy Time Bonus at 20,000x, pending provider confirmation
Due bonus?
No. Each spin is independent.

Last updated: 1 May 2026

Crazy Time Coin Flip bonus round with red and blue coin sides
Crazy Time Cash Hunt bonus round target wall
Crazy Time Pachinko bonus round puck-drop screen
Crazy Time Bonus second wheel with flapper choices

Open a bonus round

Crazy Time Bonus Rounds Snapshot

The bonus rounds are the show moments inside Crazy Time. The base wheel pays Number 1, 2, 5, and 10; the bonus segments pause base play, hand the round to a feature, and settle on the feature outcome instead. The four Crazy Time bonus game names are fixed: Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, Crazy Time Bonus.

The Four Features

Coin Flip is the simplest and most frequent in local source notes, with red and blue sides carrying separate multipliers. Cash Hunt adds the most direct user choice through symbol picking on a 108-target wall. Pachinko is the puck-drop feature with Double potential and Rescue Drop. Crazy Time Bonus is the rarest landing, with a 64-segment second wheel and three flapper choices.

Why Bonus Rounds Matter

Bonus rounds change the rhythm. A number landing settles in seconds; a bonus landing slows the show, brings the host into a feature transition, and runs a second-stage reveal. The entertainment value is the headline reason players watch live. The math is the second reason: bonus multipliers can reach much higher ceilings than base number bets, with the trade-off of higher volatility and lower hit frequency.

Not Casino Bonus Offers

Welcome bonuses, deposit matches, free spins, reload offers, and cashback are operator promotions, not wheel landings. They sit on casino bonus offers , and they carry wagering, max-bet, and live-game eligibility rules that are unrelated to the four features on this page.

What This Page Covers

This page is the cluster root: an overview of the four features, a comparison table, and routes to each child page. Full Coin Flip mechanics live on Coin Flip , full Cash Hunt mechanics on Cash Hunt , full Pachinko mechanics on Pachinko , and the red-door wheel detail on Crazy Time Bonus . For the full base game flow, how to play covers the round sequence end to end.

Game bonus round vs casino bonus offer
Search phraseMeans game featureMeans casino offerCorrect page
Crazy Time bonus roundsYes: Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, Crazy Time BonusNo/bonus-rounds/
Crazy Time bonus gamesYes: same four featuresNo/bonus-rounds/
Crazy Time bonusSometimesSometimes/bonus-rounds/ for feature; /bonuses/ for offer
Free Crazy Time bonusPossibly demo practiceOften free chips or no-deposit offer/bonuses/ or /demo/
Crazy Time bonus trackerYes: recent feature hitsNo/tracker/

Bonus Round Comparison Table

The comparison table sits before the four feature sections so the user gets the answer before the explanation. Read the columns left to right, then jump to whichever round matches your interest. All numerical claims are listed values pending provider confirmation; the Crazy Time RTP page holds the deeper return-to-player math, and bonus frequency stats holds observed sample-window data.

Compare All Four Rounds

Four rows, ten columns, one comparison view. The wheel symbol or colour identifies the feature on the live wheel. Segments map directly to theoretical probability. The typical frequency label is approximate, since observed runs drift over short windows. The RTP and max multiplier figures are listed values; treat them as comparison notes, not session promises.

Frequency and Volatility

Frequency and volatility are different axes. Coin Flip is the most frequent at 4 of 54 wheel segments, but it is also the lowest-ceiling feature. Crazy Time Bonus is the rarest at 1 of 54 segments, but it carries the highest published ceiling. Cash Hunt and Pachinko sit in the middle on frequency, with Pachinko showing very high volatility because the puck can land in low or high slots.

Interaction and Viewer Appeal

Interaction is the third axis. Coin Flip and Pachinko are watch features once the round starts. Cash Hunt is the most interactive: a real choice, a real cannon shot, a real reveal. Crazy Time Bonus is a single decision followed by a watch sequence. The 54-segment wheel shape sits on wheel segments for the full layout.

Crazy Time bonus rounds: full comparison
RoundSymbolSegmentsProbabilityFrequencyRTPMax listedVolatilityActionPage
Coin FlipRed and blue coin44/54Most frequentAbout 95.70%5,000xLowerWatch coin flip/coin-flip/
Cash HuntGreen target wall22/54MidAbout 95.27%20,000x in some notesMedium to highPick one target/cash-hunt/
PachinkoViolet peg-board22/54MidAbout 94.33%10,000xVery highWatch puck drop/pachinko/
Crazy Time BonusRed door11/54RarestAbout 94.41%20,000xExtremeChoose flapper/crazy-time-bonus/
Best for: preference labels, not winning advice
Easiest to understand
Coin Flip: two sides, one outcome, fastest result.
Most interactive
Cash Hunt: aim, pick, reveal.
Highest volatility
Pachinko: puck path, Double, and wide multiplier spread.
Highest ceiling
Crazy Time Bonus: commonly listed at 20,000x, pending confirmation.
Fastest resolution
Coin Flip settles quickly on most rounds.

How Crazy Time Bonus Rounds Trigger

A bonus round triggers in one place: when the main wheel lands on a bonus segment and the player held an active bet on that segment before the bet lock. The trigger flow is short, and the round rules page covers the full settlement detail.

Crazy Time Top Slot bonus multiplier before a feature trigger

Bet Window

The bet window opens at the start of the round, runs for about 12 to 15 seconds, and closes when the host calls no-more-bets. Chips placed during the window cover any of the eight targets: four numbers, four bonus segments. Chips placed after the lock do not count, even if a bonus round triggers.

Wheel Landing

After the bet lock, the host presses the spin and the vertical wheel rotates against a fixed pointer. If the segment is a bonus tile and the player held an active bet on that bonus, the feature triggers. If the segment is a number tile, the feature does not trigger; the number bet settles and the round ends.

Top Slot Effect

Top Slot rolls two reels above the wheel before the spin: one segment label, one multiplier value. If the segment reel matches the wheel landing and the player held a bet on that segment, the multiplier attaches. On a bonus landing, Top Slot multiplies the feature outcome. Top Slot is RNG-driven; its roll is independent of the wheel result.

Feature Settlement

Once a bonus triggers, the studio cuts to the feature stage. Coin Flip flips the coin. Cash Hunt opens the target wall. Pachinko shows the peg-board. Crazy Time Bonus moves to the virtual room with the second wheel. A long wait without a bonus is normal variance, not a due signal.

  1. Bet open

    Timer counts down and chips are accepted before the round locks.

  2. Top Slot spin

    Two reels stop on a segment label and a multiplier or blank.

  3. Main wheel spin

    The host spins the main wheel against the fixed pointer.

  4. Bonus segment lands

    A feature triggers only for active bets on that bonus segment.

  5. Feature runs

    Coin flip, target pick, puck drop, or second wheel runs to its outcome.

  6. Payout settles

    The result panel updates with feature multiplier and total win.

Coin Flip

Coin Flip is the simplest of the four bonus rounds and the most frequent in local source notes. It is the entry point most players see first, since the segment count favours frequent triggers.

Crazy Time Coin Flip bonus round with red and blue multiplier sides

What Happens

The studio cuts to a coin-flip stage. Two multipliers appear, one on the red side, one on the blue side, both generated for that round. The coin flips, and the side facing up when the flip ends decides which multiplier pays. Top Slot, if matched on the Coin Flip segment, can multiply the result.

Mechanic Detail

Coin Flip uses four segments on the 54-segment wheel, listed and pending fact check. Volatility is lower than the other three bonuses because the two visible multipliers are usually moderate values, and the worst outcome is the smaller of the two. Listed RTP sits at about 95.70%, pending fact check, and the listed multiplier ceiling is 5,000x, pending fact check.

When to Open the Full Coin Flip Page

Open Coin Flip for the full breakdown: red side and blue side mechanics, two-multiplier generation, Top Slot stacking on Coin Flip, and payout examples. For observed Coin Flip frequency in selected windows, see bonus frequency .

Coin Flip at a glance
Segments
4 of 54, listed and pending fact check
Interaction
Watch coin flip; no player action during the feature
Volatility
Lower than other bonus rounds
Result type
One of two visible multipliers, red or blue side
Listed RTP
About 95.70%, pending fact check
Listed max
5,000x, pending fact check

Cash Hunt

Cash Hunt is the most interactive bonus round: a 108-target wall, a cannon, a single pick, a single reveal. The interactive layer is the headline appeal, and it is also the most common source of myth claims.

Crazy Time Cash Hunt target wall with hidden multipliers

What Happens

A wall of 108 randomised symbols appears. Each symbol covers a hidden multiplier. The player aims a cannon at one symbol within a short selection window. The cannon fires, the chosen symbol explodes, and the multiplier behind it reveals. That multiplier applies to the original Cash Hunt stake. If the timer ends before a pick, a default symbol fires.

Mechanic Detail

Cash Hunt sits at two segments out of 54, listed and pending fact check. Listed RTP sits at about 95.27%, pending fact check, and the listed multiplier ceiling reaches 20,000x in some notes, pending fact check. Volatility is medium to high because the 108 hidden values include a wide spread, and a single pick can land anywhere on the spread.

When to Open the Full Cash Hunt Page

Open Cash Hunt for the full breakdown: cannon mechanics, autoplay behaviour, default-pick rules, multiplier spread, and the full myth list. The Crazy Time Cash Hunt strategy query routes to bonus-focused strategy , since stake planning belongs there.

Cash Hunt pick myths and the safer reading
ClaimWhy players believe itSafer explanation
Corner symbols pay moreVisual edge of the wall stands out in clipsCorner picks carry randomised values; position has no edge
Centre picks hit the top multiplierHeadline reveals tend to be filmed centrallyPosition is irrelevant to the hidden value
A specific icon is luckierSymbols repeat across playsIcons are decoration; values shuffle independently
Last reveal pattern guides next pickStreak bias from short clipsPrevious rounds do not constrain the next
Streamer picks hit high valuesOnly winning clips circulateMost picks are average; clips skew toward big wins

Pachinko

Pachinko is the puck-drop feature with Double tiles and Rescue Drop. It is the bonus users open when they want visual suspense rather than a pick.

Crazy Time Pachinko puck-drop bonus with Double and Rescue Drop

What Happens

A wall of pegs appears with multiplier slots at the base, including Double tiles and a Rescue Drop tile. The host releases the puck from the top, and it bounces through the pegs to a slot at the base. A Double tile re-drops the puck with doubled multipliers across the row. Rescue Drop returns the puck to the top for another go without changing the row.

Mechanic Detail

Pachinko sits at two segments out of 54, listed and pending fact check. Listed RTP sits at about 94.33%, pending fact check, and the listed multiplier ceiling is 10,000x, pending fact check. Volatility is very high because the puck can land in low slots or high slots, and Double cycles can stack.

When to Open the Full Pachinko Page

Open Pachinko for the full breakdown: peg layout, slot row, Double mechanics, Rescue Drop logic, multiplier stacking, and payout examples. For session bankroll math around very-high-volatility features, see bonus-focused strategy .

What Double means in Pachinko
Trigger
Puck lands on a Double tile in the multiplier row.
Effect
Every visible multiplier on the row doubles before the next drop.
Repeat
Another Double can double the row again.
Control
Double does not respond to player input; bounce path gives no reliable next-drop method.

Crazy Time Bonus

Crazy Time Bonus is the rare red-door feature, the headline bonus of the show. The rarest landing, the highest published ceiling, and the longest feature time all sit here.

Crazy Time Bonus red-door second wheel with yellow blue and green flappers

What Happens

The studio cuts to a virtual room with a 64-segment second wheel and three flappers: yellow, blue, and green. The player chooses one flapper where the operator interface supports the choice. The second wheel spins, and when it stops, the multiplier under the chosen flapper pays.

Flapper Choice and Boosts

Double doubles the visible multipliers and gives another spin; Triple triples them and gives another spin. The cycle continues until the flapper lands on a non-Double, non-Triple multiplier, which settles the feature. Multipliers can stack high during long Double and Triple chains.

When to Open the Full Crazy Time Bonus Page

Open Crazy Time Bonus for the full breakdown: 64-segment wheel layout, flapper examples with boost flow, Double and Triple chain examples, multiplier stacking math, and record-style outcome notes. For the largest bonus wins , the big-wins page covers historical maximum-payout claims with date and source qualifiers.

Probability, RTP, and Frequency

The math users expect stays short here, with deeper figures routed to Crazy Time RTP and bonus frequency stats . The fact rule applies: numerical claims are listed values pending provider confirmation.

Segment Probability

Theoretical probability comes from segment count. Local source notes commonly list nine bonus segments out of 54: Coin Flip 4, Cash Hunt 2, Pachinko 2, Crazy Time Bonus 1. That puts the combined bonus share at 16.67% of the wheel, with 83.33% landing on number tiles. Each spin is independent, so segment counts give long-run odds, not next-spin certainty.

Bonus RTP

Listed RTP for each bonus differs by feature. Coin Flip about 95.70%, Cash Hunt about 95.27%, Pachinko about 94.33%, and Crazy Time Bonus about 94.41%, all pending fact check. RTP is long-run math, not a one-session promise. The full per-bet table sits on Crazy Time RTP .

Observed Frequency

Observed frequency over a sample window can drift from the theoretical share. A 1,000-spin window may show Coin Flip near 7%, near 8%, or near 6% rather than the exact 7.41% theoretical figure. Short samples drift more than long ones. The Crazy Time stats page logs selected sample windows for each bonus, and the bonus tracker shows recent feature hits in chronological order.

Long Waits

A 15 to 20 spin gap without a bonus round is within expected variance. The wheel has no memory; a long wait does not raise the next-spin probability. Treat observed-frequency panels as descriptive, not predictive.

Bonus probability: listed values
RoundListed segmentsProbabilityRough frequencyFact status
Coin Flip44/54About 1 in 13.5 spinsPending provider confirmation
Cash Hunt22/54About 1 in 27 spinsPending provider confirmation
Pachinko22/54About 1 in 27 spinsPending provider confirmation
Crazy Time Bonus11/54About 1 in 54 spinsPending provider confirmation
Combined bonus share99/54About 16.67% of spinsPending provider confirmation
Bonus RTP teaser
RoundListed RTPVolatilityDeeper page
Coin FlipAbout 95.70%Lower than other bonuses/rtp/
Cash HuntAbout 95.27%Medium to high/rtp/
PachinkoAbout 94.33%Very high/rtp/
Crazy Time BonusAbout 94.41%Extreme/rtp/

Which Bonus Round Fits Your Play Style

Play style picks are preference labels, not winning advice. The Crazy Time bonus game strategy query routes to bonus-focused strategy for bankroll math and stake allocation; this section frames the four features by feel, since some users prefer a watchable feature and others prefer a direct pick. Demo play is the cleanest way to learn the feel of each before any real-money round.

Crazy Time demo mode for practising bonus rounds without real-money stakes

Simple and Fast

Coin Flip fits users who want the simplest bonus explanation. Two sides, one outcome, fast settlement. The watch-and-collect rhythm sits well with first-session players and with anyone who wants to keep the round count high.

Interactive and Visual

Cash Hunt fits users who like a direct pick and a clean reveal. The cannon shot is real input, the symbol picks are visible, and the reveal is the headline moment. Pachinko fits users who want visual suspense without the pick: the puck path is the show, and Double tiles can extend the feature.

High Volatility

Crazy Time Bonus fits users who want the rare headline feature and the highest published ceiling. It is also the rarest landing, so the wait between Crazy Time Bonus features can be long. For session bankroll planning at this volatility, bonus-focused strategy covers stake-size choice.

Entertainment First

If the goal is the show rather than the maximum stake exposure, Crazy Time demo is the cleanest entry point. Demo runs the same four features without real-money risk, and the feel of each round becomes familiar fast.

Play style selector
Reader stateSuggested bonusCautionNext page
Beginner or first sessionCoin FlipSmallest stake; learn the timer first/how-to-play/
Wants to interactCash HuntPick is real; hidden value is not knowable/cash-hunt/
Wants high swing potentialPachinko or Crazy Time BonusHigher volatility means longer droughts between big hits/strategy/
Watching the showAny; demo runs them allDemo balance has no cashout value/demo/
Tracking observed dataCompare frequency rather than featurePast data is descriptive, not predictive/stats/

Demo, Live Stream, and Mobile

Access intent splits into three: demo for practice, live stream for observation, mobile for play on the go. The route is short.

Crazy Time mobile app screen for bonus round viewing
Crazy Time live stream with host and bonus transition
Crazy Time demo practice screen for bonus rounds

Demo Practice

Crazy Time demo is the safest first access. The same wheel runs, the same Top Slot rolls, the same four bonus rounds trigger, all without a real-money stake. Demo balance refills automatically. Demo outcomes do not mirror a future real-money session; each session is independent.

Live Stream Preview

The live stream shows the host, the wheel, the Top Slot, and a bonus-round transition before the first chip lands. Some operators allow watch-only access without an account; others require a balance. The live stream page covers access notes.

Mobile Viewing

Mobile play uses the casino app on iOS or Android, or a mobile browser; Evolution does not publish a separate Crazy Time app. The four bonus features look and behave identically. Bonus-round controls, such as the Cash Hunt cannon and Crazy Time Bonus flapper pick, work with tap input on mobile.

Bonus round previews

Bonus Results, Records, and Big Wins

Users searching Crazy Time bonus today, Crazy Time big bonus today, and Crazy Time bonus tracker want recent feature hits, not casino offer text. The live data lives on the bonus tracker , the observed frequency lives on the Crazy Time stats page, the recent results log holds the round-by-round, and the largest bonus wins page holds record-style content.

Recent Bonus Results

A teaser shows the latest bonus hit type, the multiplier, the Top Slot match status, and the selected time window. Recent results are descriptive, not predictive: a Crazy Time Bonus hit ten minutes ago does not raise the chance of another Crazy Time Bonus on the next spin. Each spin remains an independent draw.

Biggest Bonus Wins

Record-style claims belong on big bonus wins , where date, multiplier, segment, and source qualifiers live next to each entry. A 10,000x Pachinko payout or a 20,000x Crazy Time Bonus chain is a record event, not a typical session outcome. Headline clips skew toward big wins because of survivor bias.

What Result Clips Do Not Prove

A recent bonus clip or record win does not mean the same bonus is more likely next. The wheel has no memory; a Crazy Time Bonus chain that paid 15,000x last hour does not raise the chance of another large multiplier in the next hour. Treat record clips as entertainment and max-payout context, not as a forecast tool.

Recent bonus results teaser
Selected window
Last 24 hours or last 100 spins in tracker view
Last bonus type
Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, or Crazy Time Bonus
Last multiplier
Multiplier value of the most recent feature outcome
Top Slot match
Whether Top Slot matched on that spin
Deeper data
Open tracker

Bonus Round Myths

Risky long-tail claims need a clean correction so the page does not endorse them by silence. Each entry pairs the claim, the reason players believe it, and the safer reading. The full anti-prediction angle sits on predictor limits and strategy myths ; UK players concerned about session control should also see responsible gambling for GAMSTOP, GamCare, and BeGambleAware routes.

Due Bonus Claims

A bonus is never due after a long gap. The wheel has no memory of recent rounds. A 15 to 20 spin wait without a bonus is normal variance, not a due signal. Even a 50-spin wait without Crazy Time Bonus is within expected behaviour at 1/54 segment probability. Chasing a missed bonus by raising stakes is the gambler’s fallacy in action.

Target and Flapper Patterns

Cash Hunt target position does not expose hidden multiplier value; corner picks, centre picks, and recently revealed positions all carry randomised values. Pachinko bounce history does not give a reliable next drop method; the puck path is RNG-driven. Coin Flip colour streaks do not make red or blue due; each flip is independent. Crazy Time Bonus flapper choice is preference, not edge.

Predictor and Signal Claims

Predictor apps, Telegram signals, and trick calculators cannot know the next bonus. Top Slot is RNG-driven; its roll never forecasts which segment lands. A frequency panel showing a long Coin Flip drought is past data, not a next-spin signal. Recent results panels and observed frequency are descriptive only.

Bonus round myth checker
ClaimWhy players believe itSafer reading
A bonus is due after a long gapPattern-seeking after a droughtEach spin is independent; a long wait is variance
Lucky Cash Hunt symbols pay moreStreak bias from short clipsSymbol value is shuffled and unknown per round
Pachinko drop pattern is readableVisual repetition in the bounce pathPuck path is RNG-driven; bounce history has no signal
Flapper colours have an edgeRare features feel pattern-richNo public fact supports a flapper-colour edge
Signal groups know the next bonusAuthority bias from paid signal sellersNo public method can forecast the next wheel landing

Crazy Time Bonus Rounds FAQ

What are the four Crazy Time bonus rounds?

The four Crazy Time bonus rounds are Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko, and Crazy Time Bonus. Each sits on its own segment of the 54-segment money wheel, each carries a different listed multiplier ceiling, and each triggers only when the wheel lands on its segment with an active bet.

Which Crazy Time bonus round appears most often?

Coin Flip appears most often. Local source notes commonly list Coin Flip at four segments out of 54, while Cash Hunt and Pachinko sit at two each, and Crazy Time Bonus at one.

Which Crazy Time bonus round has the highest multiplier?

Crazy Time Bonus carries the highest published multiplier ceiling. Local notes list a 20,000x figure pending provider confirmation. All ceilings are listed values, not promised wins.

What is the difference between Cash Hunt and Pachinko?

Cash Hunt is a pick feature: 108 hidden multipliers behind a target wall, and you fire a cannon at one symbol. Pachinko is a watch feature: a puck drops across pegs into a multiplier slot, with Double tiles that can re-drop.

What does Double mean in Pachinko?

Double in Pachinko means the puck has landed on a Double tile. The visible multipliers on the row beneath then double, and the puck re-drops until it lands on a non-Double slot.

Can I choose my multiplier in Cash Hunt?

No. You choose a symbol on the target wall, but the hidden multiplier behind each symbol is shuffled and unknown. The pick is real interaction; the value is not knowable.

Do flapper colours in Crazy Time Bonus have better odds?

No public fact supports a flapper-colour edge. Yellow, blue, and green flappers point at three different segments on the 64-segment second wheel, and the choice is preference.

What is the RTP of Crazy Time bonus rounds?

Local source notes list bonus RTP figures of about 95.70% for Coin Flip, 95.27% for Cash Hunt, 94.33% for Pachinko, and 94.41% for Crazy Time Bonus, all pending provider confirmation.

Can bonus round frequency predict the next spin?

No. Each spin is an independent draw, so a 15 to 20 spin wait without a bonus is normal variance, not a due signal.

Are Crazy Time bonus rounds the same as casino bonuses?

No. A Crazy Time bonus round is an in-game feature. A casino bonus is an operator promotion, such as a deposit match, free chips, or wagering offer. Promotional offers live on casino bonus offers .

For the deeper math, see Crazy Time RTP and the 54-segment wheel layout. For observed data, see bonus frequency stats and the bonus tracker . For session planning at higher volatility, see bonus-focused strategy and responsible gambling for safer-play tools.

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