Game of Thrones by Blueprint Gaming takes the HBO world into a darker, feature-heavy slot built around conquest, collection, and steady progression through Westeros. The presentation leans into stone halls, burning dragons, noble houses, and familiar faces from the series, so the atmosphere feels more dramatic than flashy. What gives the game its real identity, though, is the way it slowly grows over time. Early spins feel quite controlled, then the mechanics start opening up as new house powers are unlocked. That gives the slot a sense of campaign style momentum rather than a simple spin and bonus loop. It is a polished branded release with a strong theme and a lot going on under the surface, even if the gameplay can feel a little grindy before its best moments arrive.
This Game of Thrones release is scheduled for March 26, 2026, and runs on a 6 reel, 4 row setup with 4,096 ways to win. RTP comes in operator-dependent versions of 94%, 93%, and 92%, while volatility sits in the high range. The advertised maximum win is 17,000x the stake. Commonly listed bet limits start at 0.10, while the upper limit varies by market and casino configuration, but usually around 100.
The slot uses a collect based structure built around Cash Prize symbols, evolving house modifiers, random Dragon Fire reel events, and the Iron Throne Spins bonus. The longer you progress, the more systems the game can stack together, so it is one of those Blueprint titles where the full experience only really reveals itself once several upgrades are in play.
Blueprint’s Game of Thrones has a strong theme, a very solid sense of progression, and more mechanical depth than many branded slots settle for. The house collect ladder is clever because each unlock genuinely changes the way the game behaves, and the Seven Kingdoms Map gives the bonus side a real long-form target. That said, the game also feels quite demanding. The RTP is on the low side, the strongest content takes time to build toward, and the full payoff of the design depends heavily on unlocking upgrades before Iron Throne Spins really comes alive.
So while it has atmosphere, structure, and a few genuinely exciting moments, it does not quite feel consistently rewarding enough to rise above the middle tier. Fans of the series will probably enjoy the world and the steady sense of progress, but players who want faster impact may find it more respectable than thrilling.
Our rating 5/10