Phoenix Sun Review
Phoenix Sun is a slot developed by Quickspin, a Swedish studio with a consistent track record of producing mid-to-high volatility titles with clean mechanical design. At the time of writing, Quickspin has not published official figures for RTP, max win, volatility, hit frequency, or payline structure for Phoenix Sun, which means this review leans on what we can verify rather than a full spec breakdown.
That is an unusual position for a Quickspin release — the studio typically publishes complete spec sheets — but the absence of numbers does not change the fundamental question every player asks: is it worth your time and bankroll? We have pulled together everything currently verifiable about Phoenix Sun and set it against what Quickspin's broader catalog tells us about the studio's design tendencies. Where hard data is thin, we say so plainly and move on.
What Quickspin Has Built Here
Quickspin was founded in Stockholm in 2011 and acquired by Playtech in 2016, though it has continued operating as an independent label with its own release schedule. The studio's identity sits at the intersection of polished visual design and mechanics-first thinking — titles like Big Bot Crew, Sakura Fortune, and Ticket to the Stars each built their reputation on a single well-executed mechanic rather than feature bloat.
Phoenix Sun fits within that catalog as a mythology-adjacent release. Beyond the provider name and the slot title, verified spec data has not been made publicly available at this time. That means layout, reel count, payline structure, and bet range are all unconfirmed. Quickspin has not published an official RTP for Phoenix Sun, and no volatility classification has been confirmed through the standard certification channels we monitor.
What that means practically: this review cannot give you the kind of numbers-led analysis we apply to slots with full spec sheets. What it can do is frame Phoenix Sun within its studio context and give you a clear picture of what to look for when you load the demo.
RTP, Volatility, and Max Win
Quickspin has not published an official RTP for Phoenix Sun. This is worth stating once, clearly, and then setting aside — it does not indicate a structural problem with the game, and it is not uncommon for older catalog titles to have incomplete public spec documentation depending on the jurisdiction and aggregator displaying them.
For context, Quickspin's published RTPs across its verified catalog typically sit in the 95.00%–96.50% range. Sakura Fortune, one of the studio's most-played titles, carries a 96.61% RTP. Big Bot Crew sits at 96.26%. Phoenix Sun's figure, wherever it lands, is not confirmed — and we will not estimate it. The same applies to volatility classification and max-win multiplier: neither has been verified through a source we can cite.
What this means for bankroll planning is straightforward: without a volatility rating, you cannot calibrate session length or stake sizing with any precision. The practical workaround is to run the demo version for 100–200 spins and note how frequently bonus triggers appear. That self-generated frequency data is more useful than a missing spec label.
Bonus Features
No verified feature list for Phoenix Sun has been confirmed through the sources we monitor. Quickspin's standard toolkit across its catalog includes expanding wilds, respins, and free-spin rounds with multiplier trails — but applying any of those to Phoenix Sun specifically without confirmation would be guesswork, and this review does not do that.
If you are evaluating Phoenix Sun for its feature set, the most reliable approach is to load the demo directly from a licensed casino lobby and trigger the paytable screen. Quickspin's in-game paytables are generally well-structured and will show you the full feature list, trigger conditions, and any multiplier caps that apply.
One pattern worth noting across Quickspin's mythology-themed releases: the studio tends to anchor its bonus round to a single high-impact mechanic rather than layering multiple features. Whether Phoenix Sun follows that pattern is unconfirmed, but it is a reasonable prior to hold when you are exploring the game for the first time.
Who Phoenix Sun Is Best For
Without confirmed volatility, RTP, or max-win data, recommending Phoenix Sun to a specific player profile requires some candor about the limits of what we know. That said, a few player types will find it easier to approach this slot than others.
Quickspin regulars who have played the studio's back catalog — particularly players familiar with Sakura Fortune or Goldilocks — will have the clearest frame of reference. Quickspin's design language is consistent enough that experienced players of the studio's work will recognize the pacing and feature logic relatively quickly, even without a spec sheet to anchor expectations.
Players who rely on RTP figures to select games — a completely legitimate approach — should hold off on Phoenix Sun until official numbers are published or confirmed through a licensed operator's game info panel. There is no shortage of fully documented Quickspin titles available right now, and choosing one of those over an undocumented release is a sensible default.
Final Verdict
Phoenix Sun sits in an awkward position for a data-led review site: it carries the Quickspin name, which is a genuine quality signal, but it lacks the published spec data that would allow a complete analytical assessment. That combination makes it harder to recommend with confidence than a fully documented title, but it does not make it a slot to avoid.
For comparison, a fully documented Quickspin release like Ticket to the Stars gives players a confirmed 96.50% RTP, a 5,000x max win, and a published high-volatility classification — everything needed to make an informed stake decision before the first spin. Phoenix Sun currently offers none of that, which is a meaningful gap for players who treat spec data as a prerequisite.
The honest verdict: load the demo, check the in-game paytable for the feature list and any published RTP, and make your call from there. Quickspin's overall catalog quality is a reasonable reason to give Phoenix Sun a session. The missing specs are a reasonable reason to do that session in demo mode first.
- +Developed by Quickspin, a studio with a consistent quality track record
- +Quickspin's catalog history suggests clean mechanical design over feature bloat
- +Demo version available through licensed casino lobbies for risk-free evaluation
- -No published RTP confirmed through verified sources
- -Volatility and max-win figures are unconfirmed, making bankroll planning difficult
- -Feature list has not been verified through the sources we monitor
Best for
Phoenix Sun is a Quickspin release with no currently published RTP, volatility, or max-win figures. For players who need hard numbers before committing real money, the spec gap is a reason to wait. For Quickspin regulars who trust the studio's mechanical quality, the lack of published data is an inconvenience rather than a dealbreaker. Try it in demo mode first and track your own session results.











