How to check the RTP of slots with the Booming Games provider
Booming Games is a slot provider with a large catalogue of video slots, including Hold and Win games, bonus-buy titles, classic-style slots, and branded releases. Canadian players may see its games in offshore casinos and, in Ontario, through regulated operators where the supplier is allowed to distribute content.
RTP matters because it tells you the long-term theoretical return of a slot. A game with 96% RTP is built to return more over a very large number of spins than the same type of game running at 92%. It does not predict your next session, but it does tell you how much edge you are accepting before you press spin.
With Booming Games, the problem is transparency. I could not confirm a simple official public RTP table from Booming Games, and in some casino versions the RTP may not be clearly visible in the player-facing help screen. Third-party and operator RTP lists also show that some Booming Games titles may appear in different RTP versions, so players should not assume one published number applies everywhere.
For a plain explanation of RTP itself, read the general guide here: What is RTP in slots?. For more background on why lower RTP versions matter, see this guide: Reduced RTP in Slots – Casinos’ Manipulations Explained.
The practical point is simple: with Booming Games, checking once is not enough. A title may look the same in two casinos, but the return figure may not be the same. Spending a few seconds looking for the RTP is better than unknowingly playing a weaker version and giving up part of your chance before the first spin.Quick Answer
You may not always be able to check the RTP of Booming Games slots directly inside the game.
Start by opening the slot, then look for the menu, info, help, rules, or paytable section. Search for wording such as “RTP”, “Return to Player”, “theoretical return”, “game rules”, or “payout percentage”. If the RTP is not shown anywhere in the game help screen, do not guess. Ask casino support for the exact RTP version running in that casino, and treat vague answers as a red flag.
If the casino cannot show the RTP clearly, the safer decision is to skip that slot and choose a game where the return percentage is visible.
How to Check the RTP of Booming Games Slots
Booming Games slots can be wrapped differently depending on the casino, device, and market. That means the button layout is not always identical. Still, the checking process is usually the same: open the game information area and look for the return percentage.
Step-by-Step Guide on Desktop
- Open the Booming Games slot in demo mode first, where available.
- Wait for the game to load fully. Do not rely on the casino lobby’s RTP label alone, because lobby data can be missing, outdated, or based on a different version.
- Look around the game screen for a menu button. It may appear as three lines, a gear icon, an “i” icon, or a question mark.
- Open the menu and choose the section called Help, Game Rules, Info, Paytable, or Rules.
- Scroll through the full help screen. Do not stop after the symbol payouts. RTP is often placed near the end of the rules, below feature explanations, legal text, or game version details.
- Look for exact wording such as:
- RTP
- Return to Player
- Theoretical RTP
- Theoretical return
- Game return
- Payout percentage
- Write down the exact percentage if it is shown. For example, do not round 95.6% to “about 96%” when comparing games.
- If there is no RTP line at all, treat it as unavailable in that casino version.
Step-by-Step Guide on Mobile
- Rotate your phone only if the game asks you to. Some Booming Games slots show more controls in landscape mode, while others work fine in portrait.
- Tap the menu icon. On mobile, it may be smaller and can sit in a corner of the slot frame.
- Open Help, Rules, Info, or Paytable.
- Scroll slowly. Mobile help screens often hide long rule text behind tabs or expandable sections.
- Check all tabs if there are several sections, especially “Game Rules”, “About”, “Legal”, or “Settings”.
- Search for RTP or Return to Player.
- If the RTP is missing, take that seriously. A mobile interface that shows features and payouts but not RTP is not giving you the full picture.
What to Look for in the Game Info Screen
The RTP number should be written as a percentage. A proper game info screen should make it clear which return figure applies to the exact version you are playing.
Ideally, you want to see something like:
“Theoretical RTP: 96.00%”
or
“Return to Player: 95.60%”
The wording may vary, but the key is that the number must be attached to the actual game rules. A casino blog post, a provider profile, or a random review page is not enough. Those pages may describe the common version of the slot, not the version loaded in your account.
Also check whether the help screen shows a game ID, version number, jurisdiction note, or certification text. Those details can help support identify the exact version if you need to ask.
What If the RTP Is Not Shown?
If you cannot find the RTP in a Booming Games slot, do not invent the number from a review site.
Here is the practical order:
- Check the casino lobby first, but do not treat it as final.
- Open the slot and check the in-game help/rules/paytable.
- Search every tab in the info screen.
- Ask live chat or email support: “What is the exact RTP of this Booming Games slot in your casino?”
- Ask for the current version, not the “usual” or “maximum” RTP.
- If support gives a generic answer, refuses to answer, or only sends a link to a general provider page, skip the game.
That may sound strict, but it is fair. RTP is basic game information. If a casino offers a real-money slot but cannot tell players the return percentage, the player is being asked to play blind. That is not a good setup for anyone trying to compare games carefully.
Can Booming Games Slots Have Different RTP Versions?
Public information strongly suggests that some Booming Games titles may exist in more than one RTP version. I found operator-style RTP lists where the same Booming Games title appears with different return percentages, and one industry/platform source refers to configurable variants for market-specific tuning.
That does not mean every casino is changing every game. It also does not prove that every Booming Games slot has a reduced version. The fair reading is this: do not assume the highest number you find online is the one being used in your casino.
For players, the result is the same. Check the actual game in the actual casino before playing. This matters even more with providers where the RTP is not easy to verify from the game screen.
A difference of one or two percentage points can look small on paper, but it changes the house edge. If a slot runs at 96%, the theoretical house edge is 4%. If another version runs at 92%, the theoretical house edge is 8%. That is double the edge, even though the game may look identical.
Example: Checking a Booming Games Slot
Take a real Booming Games title such as Booming Buffalo Hold and Win Extreme 25,000.
The provider’s public news page describes the game’s layout, features, bonus buy, and maximum win potential, but that kind of announcement is not the same as the in-game RTP screen. Before playing it in a Canadian-facing casino, you would still need to open the slot itself and check the help or rules section.
If the rules screen shows the RTP clearly, use that number. If it does not, ask support for the exact RTP version. If support cannot answer, the cleanest decision is not to play that slot there. Choose a game where the return is shown clearly before you risk money.
Casino Lobby RTP vs In-Game RTP
Some casinos show RTP in the slot lobby. That is useful, but it should not be your only check.
Lobby numbers can be wrong for a few reasons. The casino may pull data from a general provider feed. The number may refer to the default version. The game may have been updated. The casino may list one number while the game client uses another version.
The in-game help screen is usually the better place to confirm RTP because it is attached to the game version you are opening. If the lobby says one number and the game rules say another, trust the game rules and ask support for clarification.
Should Canadian Players Treat Missing RTP as a Red Flag?
Yes.
Not because every missing RTP means the game is rigged. That is too strong and not proven. The issue is simpler: you cannot judge what you cannot see.
For Canadian players, especially those comparing casinos across Ontario, provincial lottery sites, and offshore brands, RTP transparency matters. If one casino lets you check the return percentage in a few seconds and another hides it or makes support guess, the transparent option is better from a player-information standpoint.
A slot can have great graphics, strong features, and a popular bonus round, but none of that replaces the return percentage. RTP is one of the few numbers that helps you understand the cost of playing over time.
Practical Checklist Before Playing Booming Games Slots
Before you play a Booming Games slot for real money, run through this checklist:
- Is the RTP shown inside the game rules or help screen?
- Does the RTP match the casino lobby number?
- Is the percentage clearly attached to this exact slot, not just the provider in general?
- Does the game show a version number or game ID?
- If the RTP is missing, did support give a precise answer?
- Is the RTP at least reasonable compared with similar slots?
- Are you checking the RTP again after switching casinos, devices, or markets?
- Are you avoiding games where the casino cannot explain the return percentage?
If you cannot tick the first few boxes, do not force it. There are enough slots where the RTP is easier to verify.
Verdict
Booming Games slots are not impossible to find in Canadian-facing casinos, but their RTP information is not always as easy to confirm as it should be. Start with the in-game help screen, look for the exact return percentage, and do not rely only on casino lobby labels or review-site numbers.
If the RTP is visible, compare it before playing. If it is hidden or support cannot give a precise answer, the practical choice is to avoid that slot in that casino. The game may still look the same, but without the RTP you do not know the real terms you are accepting.
FAQ
Open the game menu and check the Help, Info, Rules, or Paytable section. Look for “RTP”, “Return to Player”, “theoretical return”, or similar wording. If the number is not shown there, it may not be visible in that casino version.
Do not assume that. Public RTP lists suggest some Booming Games titles may appear with different RTP values. The safest approach is to check the exact game inside the exact casino where you are playing.
I could not confirm an official Booming Games RTP matrix explaining operator-selectable versions. However, public operator-style RTP data and industry sources strongly indicate that different RTP variants may exist for at least some titles. That means players should verify the live game version rather than relying on a general number from a review page.
Ask support for the exact RTP of the specific Booming Games title. If support cannot answer clearly, skip the game. Playing without knowing the return percentage means you cannot compare the slot properly.
Yes, especially with Booming Games. Check again when you change casino, switch from demo to real money, play from another province or market, or return to the game after an update.
No. RTP is a long-term theoretical figure, not a session prediction. A higher RTP gives you better theoretical conditions over a huge number of rounds, but short-term results can still be very different.