Gameplay and Design
Spinning Dino PD feels smoother than you’d expect from a cartoony setup. The 5×4 grid keeps things tight, and 20 fixed paylines make for easy tracking. I noticed right away that wins don’t come rapid-fire, but when they hit, especially with Coins or Wilds, they feel intentional. The pace is slow-burn rather than rapid-fire.
Visually, the game leans hard into the Flintstones-meets-Dragnet vibe, with a stone police HQ in the background and a jazzy 70s soundtrack. Symbols are easy to read, and animations are sharp. That “W” Wild hits like a brick when it lands, it’s worth up to 250x on its own. Menus are intuitive. Adjusting bets, enabling Turbo, or reading rules only takes a tap. The Bonus Meter during Free Spins is especially clear, making it easy to track progress without digging through a help page. It’s a playful design that doesn’t sacrifice polish. And for once, the humour actually lands.