Push Gaming Slots
Push Gaming and the dive that made its name
Push Gaming makes a small number of slots and aims for each to land hard. The one most players know is Razor Shark, a deep-sea slot whose Mystery Stacks nudge down the reels to reveal hidden symbols and a free-spins round with a multiplier that keeps climbing with no fixed cap. It set the template for the London provider's style: bold, character-led art and high-volatility maths, built portrait-first for the phone from the very start.
Four more Push Gaming slots at Wunderino
Every Push Gaming slot here is checked for the German regulated market by the Gemeinsame Glücksspielbehörde (GGL):
- Razor Returns — the sequel to Razor Shark, keeping the Mystery Stacks and Reefscatter idea on a bigger grid with a tuneable feature trigger.
- Jammin Jars — a fruit-and-disco slot on an 8×8 cluster grid, with roaming Jam Jar wilds that build compounding multipliers as symbols cascade.
- Wild Swarm — a bee-themed slot where a filling hive meter unleashes a swarm of wilds across the reels.
- Fat Rabbit — a cartoon farmyard slot whose rabbit fattens up as it eats carrots, growing into a giant wild during free spins.
Why a Push slot feels different
Two things stand out. The first is restraint: Push releases far fewer titles than most providers and finishes each to a high polish, so the catalogue is small but distinctive. The second is volatility — these are swingy games where wins cluster in the bonus rather than the base game, which makes them best approached with a clear budget. Recurring series like Razor, Fat and Jammin' Jars give returning players familiar mechanics from one release to the next.
Where to go next
If that high-variance style appeals, Relax Gaming and Nolimit City build in the same territory of bonus-led, big-swing slots. All three sit on the slots page when you want to compare them.








































