Wild Gaming is a small, standalone slots studio based in Pontypridd, Wales — not to be confused with Wild Streak Gaming, the unrelated Las Vegas-based Bragg Gaming Group brand. Wild Gaming Limited was incorporated back in 2016, but only went live as a slot studio in 2023, when its RGS platform switched on and its first wave of games shipped; today its live catalogue runs to 19 published titles on the studio’s own site — nearly double the ten we could previously verify — from the Victorian mystery of Mansion of Mysteries to the ship-battling Barti’s Treasure; a twentieth title, 2025’s Tropical Crush, has since been delisted from the studio’s own site. Our verdict: 5/10. Below, every Wild Gaming slot is listed and the best Wild Gaming slots are ranked, alongside the studio’s real ownership and licence file and the published RTPs — and, because this is a review as much as a games list, an honest account of how thin the public record still is for a studio this size.
Where to Play Wild Gaming Slots
Wild Gaming at a glance
The essentials — a Welsh studio with a company history dating back further than its games catalogue does.
| Full name | Wild Gaming Limited |
|---|---|
| Founded | Incorporated 16 May 2016 in Pontypridd, Wales; launched as an active slots studio in 2023 when its RGS platform went live |
| Directors | Wayne Griffiths (since incorporation, 2016) and John Mark Tarrant (since 2021), per Companies House |
| UKGC licence | Wild Gaming Limited, account 61179, two Gambling Software licences both Active since 1 November 2022: Non-Remote, and Ancillary Remote — a narrower single-premises licence type, not a standard online Remote licence (see Is Wild Gaming fair? for what that means) |
| Distribution partners | Not publicly named — no aggregator or platform partner is disclosed on the studio’s own site, an unusual gap for a licensed B2B supplier |
| Catalogue | 19 titles live on the studio’s own site as of July 2026 (2023–2026) — nearly double the 10 we could previously verify — all built on the studio’s own in-house RGS; a 20th title, Tropical Crush, has since been delisted from the studio’s site |
| Typical RTP | ~96.2% average across the 19 confirmed live titles, published defaults ranging 95.85%–96.61% |
| Best-known games | Mansion of Mysteries, Regal Crush Deluxe, Barti’s Treasure, Tropical Crush |
| Our score | 5/10 — full verdict below |
✓ Facts checked against the UKGC business licence register, Companies House and Wild Gaming’s own published site — 6 July 2026, re-verified and expanded 10 July 2026
The best Wild Gaming slots: 10 highlights from a 19-game catalogue
This small Welsh studio’s live catalogue has grown to 19 published titles as of July 2026 — nearly double the 10 this page previously verified — and the ten below are the ones that best show what Wild Gaming does well. RTPs quoted are published defaults from the studio’s own game pages. No separate gameplay-screenshot press kit is published, so the images below are the studio’s own official key art for each title. The remaining nine, newly confirmed live on the studio’s own site this pass, join the full ranked list near the bottom of the page.
1. Mansion of Mysteries (2023)
The studio’s most distinctive release: a Victorian-mansion mystery theme built around a genuine puzzle-style bonus round rather than a straight free-spins retrigger. Players hunt for a skeleton key among six locked doors, with each door hiding a prize, another key, or an empty room — a push-your-luck structure closer to a game show than a typical slot bonus. Published RTP of 96.22% with a 31.23% hit rate.

2. Regal Crush Deluxe (2024)
A retro fruit-machine theme with a “triple the fruits” wild mechanic: landing wilds on reels two, three and four unlocks respins and stacks up prizes rather than paying out flat. It’s the tightest-designed of the studio’s fruit-themed run, with a published RTP of 96.23% and the catalogue’s highest hit rate at 48.60% — genuinely frequent small wins rather than a long dry spell between payouts.

3. Tropical Crush (2025)
The studio’s newest confirmed release and its first genuine Megaways-style build, per third-party listings: a beach-holiday theme with an expanding wild, a bonus-buy option, and thousands of ways to win rather than a fixed payline count. Third-party sources list a published RTP of 96.16% and medium volatility; the game’s own page on the studio’s site has since been taken offline, so we’re citing the corroborated figures rather than a live primary source for this one.

4. Miami Secrets (2024)
A Miami nightlife and penthouse-treasure theme with expanding symbols and multipliers during free spins, plus the ability to retrigger extra spin rounds. It carries the catalogue’s highest published RTP at 96.3%, with a mid-table 43.43% hit rate that puts it between Mansion of Mysteries’ patience-testing structure and Regal Crush Deluxe’s frequent small hits.

5. Andean Riches (2024)
A South American adventure theme with a Robin-Hood-style freedom-fighter narrative, built around collecting eight Bags of Gold to unlock the maximum reward tier and a free-spins round capable of extending itself with further re-spins. It’s one of two Wild Gaming titles with a published max win figure we could verify: up to 2,000x bet, at a 96.13% RTP and 37.45% hit rate — the other is Barti’s Treasure, a newer catalogue entry confirmed live on the studio’s own site this pass, which publishes a considerably higher 10,000x ceiling (see the full ranked list).

6. Night Kind (2023)
A stylised heist theme built around a small cast of recurring characters — a Bulldog Boss, a Lady Cheetah, a pickpocket and a “Sir Fox” gathering for one last job — running across 8 symbols and 40 paylines. It’s the lowest hit-rate title in the confirmed catalogue at 25.8%, meaning longer waits between wins in exchange for the studio’s most character-driven presentation, at a 95.85% RTP.

7. Nico’s Sunken Treasure (2023)
An underwater Mayan-ruins theme with a dolphin mascot and a guessing-style bonus game: players pick sites to scan for free spins and multipliers rather than watching a pre-set reveal animation, echoing the door-picking structure of Mansion of Mysteries in a different setting. Published RTP of 96.23% with a 38.79% hit rate.

8. Sugar Boost (2024)
A confectionery theme pitched deliberately as the simplest game in the catalogue — the studio’s own description leans on “simple rules, easy to play” rather than any headline mechanic. A candy-shop backdrop and straightforward paytable make it the closest thing in the range to a low-friction, low-drama spinner, at a 96.18% RTP and 40.15% hit rate.

9. Searing Crush (2023)
A classic fruit-machine layout with a celestial twist, where collecting up to three star symbols builds a multiplier applied to the player’s next win rather than paying out immediately. It’s a simpler cousin of Regal Crush Deluxe’s wild-stacking approach, built around delayed-gratification multiplier collection instead. Published RTP of 95.96% with a 36.28% hit rate.

10. Triple Crush (2023)
The most old-school entry in the range: a classic 777-and-watermelon fruit-machine aesthetic with the same underlying “triple the fruits” reward logic as Regal Crush Deluxe and Searing Crush, making it the third and plainest member of what amounts to an unofficial fruit-machine shelf. Published RTP of 96.16%, matching the identical 36.28% hit rate of Searing Crush almost exactly — a sign these two share more underlying maths than the studio’s marketing distinguishes.

Wild Gaming vs the studios it competes with
Wild Gaming sits in an unusual spot: a company old enough to have existed since 2016, but a slots studio young enough to have shipped its first game only in 2023, with no disclosed distribution partner at all. Against other small studios we’ve reviewed:
| Wild Gaming | DreamSpin | Bulletproof Games | Bang Bang Games | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | Company: 2016; slots studio: 2023, Pontypridd | 2023, London | Founded earlier, UK-based | 2020, England |
| Calling card | In-house RGS, no named distribution partner | Founded by slot streamers, not developers | See our full Bulletproof Games review | “Crescendo-style” bonus rounds |
| Distribution model | Not publicly disclosed | Light & Wonder OpenGaming + Yggdrasil YG Masters | See our full Bulletproof Games review | Yggdrasil YG Masters + L&W OpenGaming |
| Own mechanics | In-house build throughout — no licensed third-party engine | None named yet — Aztec Tower’s blocker/scatter-pays combo is a first stab | See our full Bulletproof Games review | None named — layers pacing on licensed engines |
| Catalogue size | 19 confirmed titles | 6 shipped, 2 announced | See our full Bulletproof Games review | 18–23 |
The honest read: Wild Gaming is the only name on this table building its entire output in-house rather than licensing an established engine from Yggdrasil, Relax or Light & Wonder — which cuts both ways. It means no game feels like a re-skin of somebody else’s maths engine, which is more than Bang Bang Games or DreamSpin can claim; it also means no aggregator relationship is disclosed anywhere on the studio’s own site, an unusual silence for a licensed B2B software supplier and one that makes it genuinely harder to say which UK casinos actually stock the catalogue. Against DreamSpin‘s founder-story hook and Bulletproof Games‘ longer track record, Wild Gaming’s story is the plainest of the four: a company that existed quietly for seven years before switching on a slots platform, with two named directors and very little public noise since. Black Cat Games sits at the opposite extreme of that same “how much history do you bring with you” question: a Gateshead studio that went straight from founding to shipping in barely fifteen months, with a Yggdrasil YGG Masters deal and two bet365 exclusive launches to show for it already — noise Wild Gaming’s quieter, in-house approach has never chased.
The Wild Gaming game families, in depth
A catalogue that’s nearly doubled since this page’s last pass, still too young for named franchises, but three groupings are visible once you line the titles up side by side (drawn from the top 10 highlighted above — the nine further titles found this pass are too new to this page to have an established place in a family yet).
The fruit-machine shelf
Regal Crush Deluxe, Searing Crush and Triple Crush all share the same “triple the fruits” wild logic dressed in three different retro skins — the closest thing Wild Gaming has to a recognisable house style, and the strongest evidence in the top 10 that Wild Gaming leans more on reliable variations than on genuinely distinct designs.
The guessing-bonus pair
Mansion of Mysteries’ locked-door hunt and Nico’s Sunken Treasure’s site-scanning bonus round both replace a standard free-spins retrigger with a pick-and-reveal structure — the studio’s most distinctive mechanical idea, reused across a Victorian mystery theme and an underwater Mayan one.
The newer, bigger builds
Miami Secrets, Andean Riches and Tropical Crush all move toward more elaborate free-spins structures — expanding symbols, re-spin extensions, and in Tropical Crush’s case a Megaways-style mechanic — suggesting the studio’s more recent releases are reaching for more ambitious builds than its 2023 debut wave.
Signature mechanics & technology
Everything here is built in-house rather than licensed, which is unusual for a studio this size:
The locked-door / guessing bonus format
Used in both Mansion of Mysteries and Nico’s Sunken Treasure: instead of a fixed number of free spins, players choose from a set of hidden locations (doors, dive sites) that each conceal a prize, a key/multiplier, or nothing at all — a push-your-luck structure that rewards knowing when to stop scanning and bank what you’ve found.
“Triple the fruits” wild stacking
The engine behind Regal Crush Deluxe, Searing Crush and Triple Crush: landing wild symbols across specific reels triggers respins that compound rather than simply substitute for a single symbol, which is why Regal Crush Deluxe’s hit rate (48.60%) sits so far above the catalogue average.
An in-house RGS, not a licensed engine
Wild Gaming’s own site describes deploying its RGS (remote games server) platform from February 2023 in phases — 12 games by April 2023, 18 by September 2023, 26 by April 2024, per the studio’s own development-timeline copy. As of this page’s 10 July 2026 research pass, 19 titles are confirmed as live and playable on the studio’s own site — considerably closer to that roadmap than the 10 titles this page could previously verify, though still seven short of the full 26. Worth flagging plainly rather than assuming the roadmap was hit in full.
Wild Gaming slots RTP: the real numbers
The defaults: averaging around 96.2% across the 19 confirmed live titles, a tight spread from 95.85% (Night Kind) to 96.61% (Eagle Fishing and Swamp Monster, tied for the catalogue’s highest) — noticeably narrower than studios that ship multiple selectable RTP tiers per game.
No disclosed multi-tier builds: unlike several of the licensed-engine studios in our small-studio bracket, Wild Gaming’s own game pages show a single published RTP figure per title rather than operator-selectable tiers — check the in-game paytable regardless, since operator-side configuration can still vary even when a studio doesn’t advertise it.
Max wins: two of the 19 confirmed titles carry a verifiable published max-win figure — Andean Riches at up to 2,000x bet, and Barti’s Treasure, a newer catalogue entry confirmed live this pass, at a considerably higher 10,000x — modest-to-solid by modern slot standards, and we won’t guess at figures for the rest where the studio hasn’t published one. Our responsible gambling guide applies as always.
From a 2016 Companies House filing to a 2023 slots launch
| Year | What happened |
|---|---|
| 2016 | Wild Gaming Limited incorporated in Pontypridd, Wales, with Wayne Griffiths as director |
| 2021 | John Mark Tarrant joins as a second director |
| 2022 | UKGC Gambling Software (Remote and Non-Remote) licences go active, 1 November |
| 2023 | The studio’s RGS platform goes live in February; Mansion of Mysteries, Night Kind, Nico’s Sunken Treasure, Searing Crush and Triple Crush all ship |
| 2024 | Regal Crush Deluxe, Andean Riches, Sugar Boost and Miami Secrets extend the catalogue to nine titles |
| 2025 | Tropical Crush ships as the studio’s tenth confirmed release, its first Megaways-style build |
| 2025–26 | Ten further titles — Regal Crush, Star Mappers, Llama Rodeo, Sky Storm, Nico’s Temple of Jaguar, Eagle Fishing, Swamp Monster, Massive Catch, Barti’s Treasure and Night Kind 2 — are confirmed live on the studio’s own site during this page’s July 2026 research pass, taking the confirmed catalogue to 19; the studio doesn’t publish individual release dates for these, so we’re not guessing at exact years. Tropical Crush, previously the tenth confirmed release, has since been delisted from the studio’s own site (still corroborated via third-party listings, see its entry above). |
The arc that matters here isn’t a dramatic one, and that’s worth saying plainly: a Welsh company sat quietly on the books for six years before switching on a slots platform, secured its UK gambling software licences in late 2022, and has shipped a steadier trickle of games since than this page previously gave it credit for — without the acquisition, rebrand or big-partnership story that defines most of the studios on this site.
The story behind Wild Gaming

Two directors, one long-running company
Companies House records list Wayne Griffiths as a director since incorporation in May 2016 and John Mark Tarrant as a second director since August 2021 — both remain listed as active officers. Neither has a public biography or interview on record that we could find, which is genuinely typical for a small B2B studio rather than unusual or suspicious.
A studio built around “quality, creativity, attitude and experience”
Wild Gaming’s own about-page describes a team of “developers, designers, artists, mathematicians, and marketing professionals” recruited on those four criteria, with a stated aim of helping casino clients “exponentially grow their businesses” through original, non-derivative game themes. It’s standard studio-marketing language, but the emphasis on original themes over licensed IP or copycat titles is at least borne out by the 19 games now confirmed live.
A roadmap that’s closer to delivered than we first found
The studio’s own site describes a three-phase 2023–2024 rollout aiming for 26 games; as of this page’s 10 July 2026 research pass, 19 are verifiable as live and published — considerably closer to that roadmap than the 10 titles this page previously credited it with, though still seven short of the full 26. That’s not necessarily a red flag — roadmaps slip everywhere in this industry — but it’s the kind of gap worth flagging rather than smoothing over.
Is Wild Gaming fair? Licensing, regulation & the record
Checked against the Gambling Commission’s public register on 6 July 2026.
The licence. Wild Gaming Limited holds UKGC account 61179, with two Gambling Software licences both current and Active since 1 November 2022: Non-Remote, and Ancillary Remote. That second licence type is worth explaining rather than glossing over, since it’s easy to misread as a standard online licence: per the Gambling Commission’s own definition, an Ancillary Remote licence “authorises the licensee to provide facilities for single premises gaming by means of remote communication equipment that is situated entirely on the set of premises on which the gaming takes place” — narrower in scope than the standard Remote gambling software licence that most reviewed studios on this site hold for supplying games to online casinos generally. Verify it yourself on the UKGC public register.
The record. Clean: no UKGC enforcement action against Wild Gaming Limited that we can find.
So is it fair? On a clean-record basis, yes — both of Wild Gaming’s UKGC software licences are active with no adverse regulatory history we could find. Two things are worth flagging plainly rather than smoothing over, though: the specific licence combination held (Non-Remote plus Ancillary Remote, not a standard Remote licence) is an unusual fit for a studio whose own site markets itself as an online slots supplier via “single API integration”, and we can’t independently verify which casinos actually carry the catalogue day to day, since the studio discloses no distribution or aggregator partner. Neither is evidence of anything rigged — both are transparency gaps worth knowing about, distinct from an RNG-certification concern.
Beyond the reels
The corners of the story a padded, generic profile would skip past:
A seven-year gap between paperwork and product
Most studios on this site were incorporated and shipped their first game within a year or two of each other. Wild Gaming Limited’s 2016 incorporation date sitting seven years ahead of its 2023 slots launch is the single most unusual fact in its public record, and nothing on the studio’s own site explains what the company was doing in the interim.
No named distribution partner, anywhere
Every other small studio in our reviewed bracket names at least one aggregator or platform partner (Yggdrasil’s YG Masters, Light & Wonder’s OpenGaming, Relax Gaming, SoftSwiss). Wild Gaming’s own site names none, which either means a direct-integration model with individual operators or simply that the information isn’t published — we’d rather say so than guess.
Scratch cards alongside slots
The studio’s own games listing mentions “a handful of exciting scratch card games” beyond its 19 confirmed slots, a smaller side-product line that mirrors how several boutique studios round out a catalogue beyond pure reel-spinners.
New Wild Gaming slots: what’s launched for 2025–26
The state of Wild Gaming right now: the studio’s own site has quietly grown its live catalogue from the 10 titles this page previously verified to 19, with no press release or announcement we could find anywhere — Barti’s Treasure, Star Mappers, Regal Crush, Llama Rodeo, Eagle Fishing, Nico’s Temple of Jaguar, Sky Storm, Swamp Monster, Massive Catch and Night Kind 2 are all now live and playable, confirmed during this page’s 10 July 2026 research pass. Barti’s Treasure is the standout: a pirate treasure-map bonus round with a published 10,000x max win, comfortably the highest ceiling anywhere in the catalogue. Tropical Crush, previously this section’s newest confirmed release, has since been delisted from the studio’s own site.
Given how quiet the studio’s public communications are between releases — ten titles surfaced here with zero announcement we could find — we’d treat any unconfirmed listing of a “new” Wild Gaming title with caution until it appears on the studio’s own site or a reputable slot database. Paytable first, always, on any new release.
What players actually say
Genuinely hard to summarise honestly here, and we’d rather say that plainly than invent a consensus. Wild Gaming has no meaningful footprint on the major slot-review and forum communities we’d normally draw player sentiment from (AskGamblers, Casinomeister, Reddit’s gambling boards) — a function of catalogue size and studio youth rather than anything more troubling. The little third-party coverage that exists (VegasSlotsOnline’s provider round-up, a handful of aggregator listings) describes the games in neutral, catalogue-listing terms rather than passing player judgement on any individual title.
Our own read, playing fair: Mansion of Mysteries and Nico’s Sunken Treasure stand out for actually trying something with their bonus structure rather than a generic free-spins retrigger, while the three-strong fruit-machine shelf (Regal Crush Deluxe, Searing Crush, Triple Crush) feels like the same idea reskinned three times. The lack of any disclosed max-win figure on 17 of the 19 confirmed games, and no named distribution partner at all, are fair criticisms of a studio that’s otherwise licensed cleanly and shipped competent, mid-RTP games.
Which Wild Gaming slot should you play?
The thirty-second version of everything above:
| If you want… | Play | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The studio’s most distinctive bonus round | Mansion of Mysteries | A genuine locked-door push-your-luck mechanic |
| Frequent smaller wins | Regal Crush Deluxe | The catalogue’s highest hit rate at 48.60% |
| The newest release | Tropical Crush | 2025’s Megaways-style debut |
| The highest published RTP | Miami Secrets | 96.3%, the catalogue’s ceiling |
| The biggest published max win | Barti’s Treasure | 10,000x — Andean Riches is the only other title with a published max win, at 2,000x |
Our verdict on Wild Gaming
Slot Providers score: 5/10 — a cleanly licensed Welsh studio with a genuinely distinctive bonus mechanic in its best two games, let down by how little the studio discloses about its own operation.
| Game quality | 5/10 — Mansion of Mysteries and Nico’s Sunken Treasure show real design ideas; the fruit-machine shelf is repetitive |
|---|---|
| Innovation | 6/10 — the locked-door guessing-bonus format is a genuine in-house idea, not a licensed engine re-theme |
| Maths & transparency | 4/10 — only two of the 19 confirmed games publish a max-win figure, the studio’s UKGC licences are a narrower combination than they first appear (Ancillary Remote, not standard Remote), and no distribution partner is disclosed anywhere |
| Mobile experience | 6/10 — nothing published to suggest problems, but nothing to specifically praise either given how little third-party testing coverage exists |
| Catalogue depth | 4/10 — a live catalogue of 19 confirmed titles is a genuine improvement on the 10 this page previously verified, but still unremarkable depth for three-plus years of shipping |
What Wild Gaming gets right
- Every game is built entirely in-house on the studio’s own RGS — no licensed third-party engine or re-skinned mechanic anywhere in the catalogue
- Two genuinely distinctive bonus formats (the locked-door guessing game, Barti’s Treasure’s ship-battle map) not seen on the licensed-engine studios in our small-studio bracket
- A live catalogue of 19 confirmed titles, nearly double what this page previously verified, with two published max-win figures (Andean Riches 2,000x, Barti’s Treasure 10,000x)
- A clean regulatory record on both of its active UKGC gambling software licences
Where it still falls short
- No distribution or aggregator partner disclosed anywhere, making it genuinely hard to confirm which UK casinos actually carry the catalogue
- Only two of 19 confirmed titles publish a max-win figure
- Its UKGC licence combination — Non-Remote plus Ancillary Remote, not a standard Remote licence — is an unusual fit for a studio marketing itself as an online slots supplier
- Several titles lean on the same “triple the fruits” or guessing-bonus format rather than a genuinely new mechanic
Wild Gaming suits players who want to try a small, cleanly licensed UK studio’s own original bonus ideas rather than another licensed-engine re-skin. Look elsewhere if you want published max-win figures and a clear sense of which casinos actually carry the catalogue — on both counts, DreamSpin and Bang Bang Games currently publish more.
Every Wild Gaming slot, ranked
All 19 Wild Gaming releases confirmed live on the studio’s own site as of July 2026, plus a 20th, Tropical Crush, now delisted from the studio’s site but retained here for completeness. The top 10 above are ranked by design, maths transparency and how well each holds up on replay; the nine further titles below were newly confirmed live during this page’s 10 July 2026 research pass and are listed in the order found rather than ranked against the top 10.
| # | Slot | Year | In one line |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mansion of Mysteries | 2023 | A genuine locked-door push-your-luck bonus round |
| 2 | Regal Crush Deluxe | 2024 | The catalogue’s highest hit rate, 48.60% |
| 3 | Tropical Crush | 2025 | The newest release, first Megaways-style build |
| 4 | Miami Secrets | 2024 | The catalogue’s highest published RTP, 96.3% |
| 5 | Andean Riches | 2024 | Published max win of 2,000x — second-highest in the catalogue behind Barti’s Treasure |
| 6 | Night Kind | 2023 | A character-driven heist theme, 40 paylines |
| 7 | Nico’s Sunken Treasure | 2023 | An underwater take on the guessing-bonus format |
| 8 | Sugar Boost | 2024 | The deliberately simplest game in the range |
| 9 | Searing Crush | 2023 | Star-collecting multipliers on a fruit-machine layout |
| 10 | Triple Crush | 2023 | The plainest of the studio’s three fruit-machine titles |
| 11 | Barti’s Treasure | — | A pirate treasure-map bonus with the catalogue’s highest published max win, 10,000x |
| 12 | Star Mappers | — | A space-exploration theme with a retriggerable, stacking hyper-jump feature |
| 13 | Regal Crush | — | The base version of Regal Crush Deluxe’s retro fruit-and-wild format, 20 paylines |
| 14 | Llama Rodeo | — | A rodeo-endurance theme built around how long you can hang on |
| 15 | Eagle Fishing | — | The catalogue’s highest published RTP (96.61%), a lakeside fishing theme |
| 16 | Nico’s Temple of Jaguar | — | A second Nico adventure, hunting four keys to a lost temple |
| 17 | Sky Storm | — | A hot-air-balloon endurance theme, sibling in spirit to Llama Rodeo |
| 18 | Swamp Monster | — | A swamp-chase theme tied with Eagle Fishing for the catalogue’s highest RTP |
| 19 | Massive Catch | — | A sea-fishing theme with expanding wilds in free spins, 10 winlines |
| 20 | Night Kind 2 | — | A sequel bringing back the original Night Kind cast on the same 40-payline format |
Top 10 ranked 6 July 2026. Rows 11–20 were confirmed live on the studio’s own site during this page’s 10 July 2026 research pass — the studio doesn’t publish individual release dates for these, hence the “—” years, and we checked every RTP/hit-rate figure against its own game page rather than guessing. Tropical Crush (row 3) was confirmed live in earlier research but its own game page is no longer on the studio’s site; its figures are corroborated via third-party listings only. Availability varies by casino; always check the in-game paytable.
Popular UKGC-licensed casinos with Wild Gaming slots
Wild Gaming discloses no distribution or aggregator partner on its own site, and we could not verify a reliable list of named UKGC-licensed casinos carrying the catalogue at the time of writing — a direct consequence of the same transparency gap covered above. Rather than publish a list of Wild Gaming casinos we can’t confirm actually stock these games, we’re saying so plainly. If you do encounter Wild Gaming titles in a UK casino lobby, treat that operator’s own licensing exactly as you would any other: verify it on the Gambling Commission’s public register before depositing, and note that game availability changes constantly. This section is informational only — no commercial relationship, no endorsements, 18+, please gamble responsibly.
Checked 6 July 2026.
Sources & Verification
Primary sources checked 6 July 2026, re-verified and substantially expanded 10 July 2026: the Gambling Commission’s business licence register (account 61179); Wild Gaming’s official site, including its About Us page and full games catalogue, plus individual game pages for RTP, hit-rate and feature data on every title in the ranked list below; company and director history from Companies House (company number 10182529). The Tropical Crush RTP and mechanic details are corroborated via third-party slot databases since the studio’s own page for that title is no longer live. Imagery is the studio’s own official key art. Spotted an error? Tell us — corrections are actioned as a priority.
✓ Updated 10 July 2026: found and added nine further titles confirmed live on the studio’s own site that weren’t previously listed here (Regal Crush, Star Mappers, Llama Rodeo, Sky Storm, Nico’s Temple of Jaguar, Eagle Fishing, Swamp Monster, Massive Catch, Night Kind 2), plus Barti’s Treasure with its 10,000x max win — the catalogue’s highest published figure, ahead of Andean Riches’ previously-only 2,000x — to the full ranked list, taking the confirmed live catalogue from 10 to 19 titles; corrected the UKGC licence description from a plain “Remote” software licence to the Ancillary Remote licence Wild Gaming actually holds, with an explanation of what that narrower licence type covers; added a pros/cons verdict block with matching Review schema notes; and moved the on-page navigation up under the ads module.
Wild Gaming FAQs
Who owns Wild Gaming?
Wild Gaming Limited, a Pontypridd, Wales-based company incorporated in 2016, with Wayne Griffiths and John Mark Tarrant listed as its directors at Companies House. It is not related to Wild Streak Gaming, the US-based Bragg Gaming Group brand.
Is Wild Gaming the same company as Wild Streak Gaming?
No. Wild Gaming Limited is a standalone Welsh studio; Wild Streak Gaming is a separate, unrelated Las Vegas-based brand owned by Bragg Gaming Group.
Is Wild Gaming fair, or are its games rigged?
Wild Gaming Limited holds two active UKGC Gambling Software licences (account 61179): Non-Remote, and Ancillary Remote — a narrower single-premises licence type, not a standard online Remote licence — both with a clean regulatory record. See Is Wild Gaming fair? above for what that licence combination actually covers.
What is the best Wild Gaming slot?
Mansion of Mysteries is our top pick for its genuine locked-door bonus mechanic, with Regal Crush Deluxe and Tropical Crush close behind. Our full ranked ten, with reasoning, is above.
How many games has Wild Gaming released?
19 confirmed slots live on the studio’s own site as of July 2026 — nearly double the 10 this page previously verified — plus a 20th, Tropical Crush, that’s since been delisted from the studio’s site, and a small number of scratch card games. The studio’s own roadmap language referenced 26 games; 19 is the closest verifiable figure we could confirm.
Which casinos have Wild Gaming slots?
We could not verify a reliable list — the studio names no distribution or aggregator partner publicly, which is unusual for a licensed B2B supplier of this size.
When was Wild Gaming founded?
The company was incorporated in 2016, but only launched its slots platform and first games in 2023 — a seven-year gap between paperwork and product that’s the most unusual fact in its public record.