In March 2024, Roshtein hit a 12,500× multiplier on Hand of Anubis at Stake. €50 bet returned €625,000. The clip went viral; the slot's profile spiked across every streamer rotation for the following 6 weeks. Worth understanding why this specific number is structurally rare even on a max-win-chase slot.
Hand of Anubis (by Hacksaw Gaming) has a published max-win cap of 12,500×. That's not "the highest commonly seen win" — it's the absolute mathematical ceiling. Hitting it requires the cluster mechanic to compound through max-multiplier triggers in the bonus round. Hacksaw publishes the modeled probability: roughly 1-in-1.2-million spins.
For context: at €50/spin, hitting the cap is an EV-equivalent of about €60 expected return per spin from this single outcome alone (€625k payout × 1/1,250,000 probability ≈ €0.50, scaled to bet size). The other 99.99992% of spins fund this outcome.
Three things this tells you:
One. The max-win cap of 12,500× is a real number, not marketing copy. It can be hit. It almost never will be in any individual session.
Two. Roshtein's session bankroll absorbed thousands of cold spins to be in position for this hit. The visible session is the win clip. The invisible session is the hours of bonuses opening at 50–500× and disappointing.
Three. The 96.31% RTP this slot carries means that across millions of spins, $0.9631 comes back per dollar in. The 12,500× hits are the right tail; the modal session is a slow loss. Both things are true at once.
This is why we publish the math on every slot's carrier list: when you see "max win 12,500×" you should be reading "the brutal expected variance that funds the rare ceiling-touching outcome." That structure is the slot. The clip is the moment that structure paid off.