Greedy Alice 2: Bigger Bites hands you a fairytale gone feral. Alice stares out wild-eyed and grinning while the Cheshire Cat looms at her shoulder and the whole moonlit wood seems to hold its breath. Look past the gothic dressing, though, and this Peter & Sons slot is really one number in a costume. A doubling multiplier climbs with every cascade, and the 20,000x maximum win sits at the very top of that ladder rather than anywhere in the symbol values. The art pulls you in. The multiplier is what keeps you staring.
Every feature in the game funnels toward the same place, the multiplier that doubles as the reels keep paying. Understand that one system and the rest falls into place.
Greedy Alice 2 drops fixed lines entirely. Land eight or more of the same symbol anywhere across the five reels and six rows and you have a win. Those symbols clear, new ones fall into the gaps, and any fresh combination keeps the sequence alive. The grid does the work; your job is to watch the chain build.
Every winning tumble doubles the total multiplier, opening at x1 and stepping up through 2x, 4x, 8x, 16x, 32x with no published cap. Here is the catch that shapes standard play. The instant a spin pays nothing, or a cascade chain ends, the multiplier drops straight back to x1. That is why the headline 20,000x lives here and not in the paytable, where even the Red Queen tops out at 50x. The symbols set the spark; the multiplier decides the size.
On any spin there is a random chance the multiplier skips a rung instead of climbing one step at a time, lifting the ladder up a level on its own. It is a small touch with outsized effect, since it speeds up the only figure that moves the win.
A mystery block, either 2×2 or 3×3, can drop onto the grid and transform into a single symbol type, instantly seeding a cluster. If two or more blocks land together they are barred from becoming the same symbol, so one Barrage rarely hands you a clean eight-of-a-kind by itself. It can also fire on a dead board at random, quietly rescuing spins that produced nothing.
Three Drink Me scatters award eight free spins; four award eight Super Free Spins. The round plays exactly like the paid game with one rule flipped, and it is the rule that matters most. The multiplier no longer resets between wins, so it carries across the whole session and compounds spin after spin. Super Free Spins go one further by guaranteeing a Barrage on every single spin. Both rounds lock to the triggering bet and cannot be retriggered.
Prefer to force the issue? Golden Bet adds 50% to your stake in exchange for a better shot at triggering the feature. If patience is not your thing, the demo lets you buy straight in at x100 for Free Spins or x400 for Super Free Spins, both at your chosen bet size. That fourfold gap is worth a thought, since only the pricier option guarantees a Barrage on every spin from the off.
Wins here do not travel along lines, they pile up by sheer weight of numbers. Eight identical symbols anywhere on the grid is the threshold, and from there the count brackets set the prize, with groups of 8 to 9, 10 to 11, and 12 or more each paying progressively more.
The 5×6 panel gives you thirty positions to fill, and because every win clears space for new symbols to drop, a single spin can resolve into several paid tumbles before it settles. Volume matters more than ever here, since the gap between nine matching Red Queens and twelve is the gap between a minor return and a serious one.
This is a feast-or-famine design. Long runs can pass with the wood sitting quiet and nothing landing, then one deep cascade chain with the multiplier stacked returns more than the previous fifty spins combined. Treat free play as the place to feel that rhythm before it costs you anything.
The values below read against a 10-coin bet; scale them to whatever stake you set. Each symbol pays across three count brackets, and only the highest bracket it reaches is awarded.
| Premium Symbol | 8–9 | 10–11 | 12+ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Red Queen | 8 | 20 | 50 |
| Cheshire Cat | 4 | 12 | 30 |
| Green Bird | 3 | 8 | 25 |
| White Rabbit | 3 | 7 | 20 |
Low Symbols:
| Royal Symbol | 8–9 | 10–11 | 12+ |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 2 | 5 | 15 |
| K | 2 | 4 | 12 |
| Q | 1 | 3 | 10 |
| J | 1 | 3 | 8 |
| 10 | 1 | 3 | 6 |
Reviewed on looks alone, Greedy Alice 2 would sit near the top of the dark-fairytale set. Reviewed on everything else, it spends almost its entire design budget on a single idea. The doubling multiplier is the whole show, dazzling when it runs and punishing when it refuses to start, so the game lives or dies on whether you reach a feature with the reset rule switched off. High-variance players who prize striking art will find a great deal to admire. Anyone who wants steady, frequent returns should look elsewhere.
Peter & Sons has carved out a niche in fairytales with the shine rubbed off, and Greedy Alice 2 might be their sharpest-looking entry yet. Alice’s wild-eyed grin, the Cheshire Cat’s slow menace and the hush of the moonlit wood all pull in one direction, helped by a restrained palette that lets the gold interface and multiplier cards glow against the murk. It is a slot you want to keep open just to look at. It builds directly on the original Greedy Alice, keeping the scatter-pays-and-cascade core and pushing every number harder.
Strip the art away and the design is almost startlingly focused. Wins arrive when eight or more symbols gather anywhere on the grid, cascades clear them, and each fresh win doubles a multiplier that opens at x1. That doubling is the entire game. The paytable barely registers beside it, with the Red Queen worth just 50x for a full twelve at the reference bet, so the road to anything large runs through stacked cascades rather than rich symbols.
The honest catch is that this escalator keeps collapsing. Any losing spin in normal play sends the multiplier back to x1, so long quiet runs leave you watching a ladder you never get to climb. Everything shifts the moment a feature lands. Three scatters open eight free spins where the multiplier no longer resets between wins, and that single switch is what the whole game is built to reach. Four scatters push it into Super Free Spins, where a guaranteed Barrage on every spin keeps feeding the board while the multiplier compounds untouched.
That structure makes the buy menu genuinely interesting rather than a throwaway. Free Spins cost x100, Super Free Spins x400, and the fourfold gap is really a question of how much you value a guaranteed Barrage and a head start on the count. Neither is a soft option, since eight spins is a short window and a cold draw can still come back with little. Golden Bet sits alongside as a gentler lever, lifting your stake by half for a better chance at the natural trigger.
None of this is a flaw so much as a personality. Greedy Alice 2 is built for players who accept long droughts as the price of a genuinely steep climb, and who take as much from art direction as from hit frequency. If you need regular wins to stay engaged, the quiet will wear on you. If you came for the spectacle of a multiplier finally let off its leash, this is one of the more committed versions of that promise on the shelf.