Coin Strike 2: Hold and Win is Playson's follow-up to its original coin-collection slot, with a 3x4 reel layout and 8 fixed paylines. It runs at a 95.65% RTP, carries high volatility, and caps its max win at 15,000x stake. This review breaks down the Hold and Win respins, the Strike Boost and Collect Feature additions, and where Bonus Buy fits into the betting range.

Coin Strike 2 Grid and Core Mechanics

The game runs on a 3x4 grid instead of the standard 5x3 layout most slots use. That changes how the 8 paylines line up across the board. Fewer reels with an extra row means symbols cluster differently than in a typical fruit-machine style title.

Coin Strike 2 main game screen by Playson

Obviously, Coin Strike 2 keeps the same coin-collection foundation as the first entry but compresses it onto a smaller board. The bet range runs from $0.20 to $100, wide enough to cover both cautious testing and higher-stake sessions.

RTP and Volatility

Coin Strike 2 pays out at a 95.65% RTP, slightly below the 96% benchmark common across Playson's wider catalogue. Volatility is high, so swings between dry spins and bigger hits will be wider than on a medium-variance title.

Spec Detail
RTP 95.65%
Volatility High
Reels 3x4
Paylines 8
Min bet $0.20
Max bet $100
Max win 15,000x stake

A sub-96% RTP is common for Hold and Win formats. These games often trade a slightly lower baseline return for a chance at jackpot-style payouts collected during respins. Players comparing RTP across coin-collection slots should weigh the jackpot ceiling alongside the percentage itself.

Symbols and Paytable

The paytable runs on classic fruit-machine icons: cherries, bells, bars and sevens fill the low and mid tiers, while coin symbols carry the collection mechanic. That split keeps the base game readable even with only 3 reels in play.

Cherries symbol on the Coin Strike 2 paytable

The fruit symbols pay modestly on their own, which is standard for this genre. The real payout weight sits with the coin values collected during Hold and Win, not the base paytable icons.

Hold and Win Respins

Hold and Win is the genre standard for coin-collection slots: landing enough coin symbols locks them in place and triggers a set of respins. Every new coin that lands during those respins resets the count, and the round ends only when the grid runs dry or fills completely.

On a 3x4 board that means 12 positions total, a smaller target than the usual 5x3 Hold and Win layout. Filling every position for the top jackpot is rarer here, but each individual coin land also covers more of the grid at once.

Strike Boost and Collect Feature

Strike Boost and the Collect Feature sit on top of the core Hold and Win respins rather than replacing any of it. Both run on the same coin-value system and give individual hits more ways to grow before the respins lock in.

Strike Boost feature in Coin Strike 2

Collect Feature does what the name suggests: it gathers qualifying coin values across a spin rather than letting each one resolve on its own. Strike Boost works alongside it as a second coin-value mechanic, though Playson has not published the exact trigger conditions for either feature.

Bonus Buy and Max Win Potential

Bonus Buy gives a direct route into the Hold and Win respins for players who would rather skip the wait for a natural trigger. Coin Strike 2 caps its top payout at 15,000x stake, a ceiling that sits comfortably among high-volatility coin-collection titles.

That max win sits below some five-figure-multiplier slots on the market. The smaller 3x4 board is part of the reason, compared to a wider 5x3 or 6x5 grid. Bonus Buy pricing and availability depend on the operator, so checking the in-game menu before paying for a feature round matters.

Verdict on Coin Strike 2

Coin Strike 2 works best for players who already like Hold and Win formats and want a faster, more compact version of the format. The 3x4 grid trades board size for pace, and the 95.65% RTP sits in line with what high-volatility coin-collection slots usually run.

Pros Cons
Compact 3x4 grid speeds up the Hold and Win round RTP sits below Playson's usual 96% baseline
High volatility with a 15,000x max win ceiling Strike Boost and Collect Feature mechanics are not fully documented
Wide $0.20-$100 betting range Smaller 12-position grid means fewer total coin spots than 5x3 layouts

Anyone who found the original Coin Strike too slow should notice the difference here, since fewer reel positions mean the respins resolve faster. Players chasing maximum coin-collection drama across a wide board may prefer a different title. As a tighter, higher-volatility take on the format, Coin Strike 2 holds up.