Every Hacksaw Gaming catalogue has a slot that sits at the bottom of the score table for fair reasons. On my list, Le Bunny is that slot. A 6.0 is not a bad score in absolute terms, but in a series that routinely reaches the mid-sevens and beyond, it marks a clear gap. It is worth explaining why, because the game is not broken. It is simply the most repetitive entry in an increasingly long series.
The facts first. Le Bunny is a medium-volatility 6x5 cluster-pays slot released by Hacksaw Gaming in March 2026. RTP is 96.14% in the standard version. Stakes run from US$ 0.10 to US$ 100 a spin. The max win is 20,000x. There are four bonus buy options priced at 3x, 60x, 80x and 250x your stake. The cluster mechanic runs on Super Cascades with a hit frequency around 41%.
6.0 / 10Hacksaw Gaming · Mar 2026I tested it across sessions at BC.Game and winz.io, both running the full standard RTP. My main working stake was US$ 0.10 a spin. I also ran each of the four bonus buys once to compare the feature modes.
The good news: the Golden Squares system remains one of the most tactile bonus mechanics in the cluster-pays genre. The less good news: you have almost certainly played it before under a different name, with a different cartoon character, in a different theme. That familiarity is exactly what holds the score down. For new players looking for a well-built cluster slot to try at one of the casinos on our shortlist, this still delivers a competent, honest hour.
Before I get into the mechanics, a brief note on where this slot sits in the Hacksaw Gaming catalogue. This is the ninth game in the Le series, launched with Le Bandit in August 2023. Each entry uses the same 6x5 cluster engine with largely identical rules.
The series produced genuinely good entries early on. By the time Le Bunny arrived, the formula had been repeated eight times with minimal variation. That context matters when reading the verdict.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Provider | Hacksaw Gaming |
| Release | March 2026 |
| Grid | 6x5, cluster pays (min. 5 connected) |
| RTP (standard) | 96.14% |
| RTP variants | 88.25% / 92.25% / 94.18% / 96.14% |
| Volatility | Medium (3/5) |
| Hit frequency | ~41% |
| Max win | 20,000x |
| Stakes | US$ 0.10 to US$ 100 |
One number stands out before anything else. Hacksaw ships this game in four RTP versions down to 88.25%. That bottom tier gives the house a roughly 12% edge, which is enormous for a cluster slot. Check the info panel at your casino before you play. I confirmed 96.14% at both BC.Game and winz.io; anything below 94% means you should simply play elsewhere.
The cluster engine pays on five or more identical symbols connected horizontally or vertically. Each win triggers Super Cascades: winning symbols vanish, new ones drop from above, and the sequence repeats until no new cluster forms. Standard behaviour for a Hacksaw cluster title, and it keeps the base game lively even on low stakes.
The differentiating system is Golden Squares. Every symbol that forms part of a winning cluster leaves a marked position on the grid. These squares do nothing until a Rainbow symbol lands during the same spin or a later cascade. When the Rainbow appears it activates every square, and each one reveals one of the following:
In the base game, squares reset at the start of each new spin. That limits how much they can stack. The interesting mathematics live in the bonus rounds, where persistence changes everything.
The Jackpot Egg is the rarest outcome from a Golden Square reveal. Four tiers: Mini at 10x, Major at 100x, Mega at 1,000x, and Max Win at 20,000x. A Mega egg at US$ 0.10 stake is US$ 100. The Max Win egg at US$ 0.10 is US$ 2,000, a solid result for a small-stakes session.
I have not landed a Jackpot Egg above Mini in my own sessions. The structure above comes from Hacksaw Gaming's verified rules, not personal experience.
Landing 3, 4 or 5 scatter symbols triggers three distinct bonus rounds, and each one is a clear step up from the last. The more scatters you land, the more the squares persist and stack between spins. The difference between a 3-scatter and a 5-scatter trigger is structural, not cosmetic. The table below lays out which entry gives you what.
| Scatter count | Bonus name | Spins | Key mechanic |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 scatters | Spell of Luck | 10 | Squares persist until Rainbow activation; min. coin = 1x stake |
| 4 scatters | Swiping the Sweets | 10 | Squares persist even after Rainbow activation, accumulating all 10 spins |
| 5 scatters | Rainbow Riches Hidden Epic | 10 | Each spin guarantees a Rainbow; Silver/Gold Coins only, no Bronze |
Re-triggers add 2 extra spins for 2 scatters or 4 for 3 scatters during any bonus. The 5-scatter Rainbow Riches Hidden Epic is not available via bonus buy. Organic trigger only. That is a nice design decision. My two organic entries into Swiping the Sweets paid 187x and 43x. The 43x was a dead session that came to nothing except a dry record; the 187x felt like a good day on medium volatility.
| Feature buy | Price (× stake) | What you get | RTP |
|---|---|---|---|
| BonusHunt FeatureSpins | 3x | 5x higher chance to trigger any bonus organically (not a guarantee) | 96.13% |
| RainbowCatching FeatureSpins | 60x | Each spin guarantees min. 1 win and 1 Rainbow; squares activate every spin | 96.31% |
| Spell of Luck | 80x | Instant 10 free spins; persistent squares, min. coin 1x | 96.31% |
| Swiping the Sweets | 250x | Instant 10 free spins; squares persist and accumulate across all 10 spins | 96.36% |
BonusHunt at 3x is misleading to some players: it does not buy you a bonus round, it raises your trigger frequency for the next batch of spins. If you spin 20 times at 3x overhead and no bonus triggers, you have paid a toll for nothing. I ran it for 30 spins at US$ 0.10 and hit zero bonuses. That is not unusual; it is just probability.
RainbowCatching at 60x is the most interesting mechanical option. Guaranteed Rainbow activation on every spin means the Golden Squares fire constantly, and the runs of consecutive Bronze Coins feel genuinely tense. My one test buy paid 89x. At US$ 0.10 stake the cost was US$ 6.00 and the return US$ 8.90, a small net positive but well within statistical noise. The real variance shows over dozens of buys, not one.
Swiping the Sweets at 250x is the premium tier. At US$ 0.10 that is US$ 25.00 per purchase. My run paid 341x, so US$ 34.10. A 36% gain on a single buy, above average but well within normal variance.
Over many purchases the RTP of 96.36% implies a long-run cost of roughly US$ 0.90 per buy before volatility. The variance is what makes this feel either lucrative or like it burns money, depending on which side of the distribution you land. If crypto deposits are new to you, the Trust Wallet guide and USDT primer cover the fee mechanics.
Independent review sites score it 6 to 6.5 out of 10, and my own score matches. The criticism that lands most fairly is the reskin charge. This slot runs identical mechanics to Le King, Le Santa, and at least three other titles in the series. Hacksaw Gaming swapped in Easter eggs and Irish shamrocks, added a bunny character, and shipped what is functionally the same product for the ninth time.
That is not a catastrophe. The engine they are reskinning is genuinely good. A 41% hit frequency keeps the base game active. Sessions have a shape: slow starts, occasional Rainbow activations that pay small, then rare runs where Gold Coins and a Clover line up.
I had one such run at US$ 0.10 where a single cascade paid 56x from one Gold Coin magnified by an adjacent Green Clover. That moment felt earned.
The problem is grip. After playing Le King and Le Zeus earlier in the year I found it harder to stay engaged. The Easter imagery is pleasant but passive. There is no moment in this slot that you would not find in a sibling title.
Compare that to a slot like Gates of Olympus where the multiplier orb system creates genuine narrative tension across the bonus. Le Bunny's Clovers are more random. They fire or they do not, and the player has no read on which is coming.

The one genuine credit: the four-tier bonus structure is well calibrated. The distinction between Spell of Luck and Swiping the Sweets is real and meaningful. Choosing between 80x and 250x involves actual trade-offs, not just a bigger number.
Not every cluster slot differentiates its bonus modes that clearly. For players new to the Le series, this is a fair entry point. Just know that Le Bandit or Le Pharaoh will feel fresher if you have not played either yet.
Hacksaw Gaming titles are available on the Africa-facing operators I cover, including BC.Game and Rainbet. The game's medium volatility and US$ 0.10 floor stake keep sessions manageable. There is no strong organic demand for this title in Nigeria, Kenya or Ghana based on everything I found during research. This is an Irish Easter slot released in March 2026, not a title with cultural roots in West or East Africa.
What matters more in practice is the deposit route. A USDT transfer on the TRON network remains the cheapest path into a casino like BC.Game from Lagos or Nairobi. Our TRC-20 guide covers the mechanics; the Binance M-Pesa guide and Nigeria crypto guide cover the fiat-to-crypto conversion step. For players in Kenya specifically, our Kenya casino guide lists operators with confirmed local payment support.
Gambling always carries real financial risk, and I keep my own session budgets fixed before I start, following the principles on the responsible gambling page. That discipline matters more on a volatile buy like Swiping the Sweets than on a low-stakes base game session.
This is a competent medium-volatility cluster slot with a well-built four-mode bonus structure and a 20,000x ceiling. The Golden Squares mechanic is engaging. The Jackpot Egg tiers give low-stakes players a route to meaningful payouts without large stakes. On those measures I could justify a higher number.
I land on 6.0 because the series has exhausted its novelty. A ninth game on the same engine with the same rules and a new cartoon character is a product decision, not a design one. If you have never played a Le title, this is a fair place to start. If you played Le King or Le Zeus in the last six months, this is the same thing in different clothes.
Sessions at US$ 0.10 to US$ 0.20 a spin are where I would keep it. At those stakes RainbowCatching FeatureSpins at 60x costs US$ 6–12, a reasonable punt to see the feature quickly. At 250x per buy, Swiping the Sweets demands a large balance to absorb variance. I would only run it with at least 500x the stake on hand.
For more options across the Hacksaw catalogue, start from the studio hub and work down the score table. If you want to know how a 6.0 gets assigned, the how we test page lays out my method in full. It covers the scoring breakdown and the buy-by-buy session logging, and it explains why a slot can be competently built yet still land mid-table. That is exactly the case here. The same how we test page is where I document every stake and result behind the numbers above.