Most people haven’t heard of Amatic and I get it. They don’t market themselves the way Pragmatic or NetEnt do. Austrian company, family-owned, been making slot machines since 1993 — back then it was all physical cabinets for land-based casinos. The founder still runs it, which… yeah, that almost never happens anymore in this industry.
At some point they launched an online division called Amanet and started converting their land-based stuff for the internet. You can tell, too. Their slots have this old-school vibe that either clicks with you or doesn’t. No cinematic intros, no 3D nonsense. Reels, symbols, and that Gamble feature where you pick a card colour or suit to double or quadruple your win. Simple. Some players love it.
Their catalogue isn’t massive — around 170+ titles, which is nothing compared to what Pragmatic or Play’n GO pump out. But Amatic isn’t trying to compete on volume. Book of Aztec, Book of Fortune, Hot Fruits 40, Wolf Moon — these are their staples and they’ve held up surprisingly well. The RTPs hover around the 95-96% range on average, which is a bit below the industry standard, but the gameplay is steady and the volatility tends to be manageable.
One thing I’ll say — Amatic slots don’t have background music. Seriously. You spin in silence unless something wins. It’s weirdly calming once you get used to it, but it throws people off the first time.
We’ve tested a bunch of their games here at Spinoplex and we review them the same way we review everything else. Load them up, play through actual sessions, see how the features trigger in practice, check if the math feels right over extended play. No copy-pasting spec sheets. If an Amatic slot is boring, we’ll say that. If it surprises us, we’ll say that too.
Innovation? No. That’s not what Amatic is about. But if you just want a slot that doesn’t try to be a movie or a video game, their stuff is worth a look.





