Wild Toro
Wild Toro review
Since bullfighting is, in general, a themed that brings Spanish scenery and flamenco to mind, Elk Studios stay consistent and ensure you'll get the proper vibe.
We can see pink walls and paper decorations in the windows of small houses, old-fashioned lanterns, and bunting from a bird’s eye view. It's a gentle flamenco sound with sound effects of crowd voices in the distance. Clouds move, smoke comes out of chimneys and little flags move with the wind. The music is gentle flamenco.
The 5 big reels have a darkened shade, and completely take over the screen. In particular, the flower, matador and ornate fan icons stand out, appearing in their reels. It's all too overwhelming and distracting. As this game isn't your traditional playing, there aren't reels on the side and credit buttons. Playing is easy to see with a large, inviting button. The Wildcard is labelled Wild Toro in big yellow letters, and replaces everything except Toro and Matador. If you get a winning line purely from Wildcards, you'll win the jackpot.
A more exciting symbol is the Toro symbol, which only appears on the fifth reel. This rather snazzy looking bull is a Walking Wild that moves from left to right one respin at a time. The Matadors are changed into Wildcards and the Wildcards stay that way for the first reel. You've never seen anything like it before! The Matadors on reels 2, 3 and 4 become Respin Triggers, which hold the Matadors in place and give extra spins if another Matador appears.
This is a better explanation of the four options for play. The Optimiser (blue) adjusts the bet level automatically based on the percentage of your balance selected (1%, 2%, 5% or 10%). The Leveller (green) increases two levels after five consecutive losses, and it increases two more levels if repeated.