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Company 🖈

Murka Games Limited (2015). 

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Payment ✉

  • Visa
  • Mastercard

Games ♣

  • Slot-style games

Restricted States ⚑

Infinity Slots do not publicaly state which states are restricted

Trustscore ❖

  • Trustpilot: N/A
  • Scamadviser: N/A
  • FP Rating: Not Trusted

Pros ✔

  • You start with 3M Gold Coins
  • Many slots to choose from

Cons ✖

  • Lacking game variety
  • Extremely poor website UX
  • Slow and laggy performance
  • No redemption path (virtual currency only)

INFINITY SLOTS REVIEW - IS THIS SOCIAL CASINO WORTH TRYING? 

If you are expecting a sweepstakes casino, Infinity Slots is not it. It is a social casino that runs on virtual coins, and it is positioned as entertainment only, with no real-money gambling and no real prizes. That part is very clear in the Terms.

What surprised me was not the coin-only model, it was how hard the website was to use. I had multiple sessions where I could not reliably get back into the lobby to play. I kept getting stuck on a “free coins” pop-up, and the loading screen was so slow and laggy that it felt like the site was fighting me every time I clicked Home.

So this review is going to be blunt. There are a few things Infinity Slots does well, like theme variety and the sheer “mobile app casino” vibe. But as a website experience, it genuinely frustrated me.

Table of Contents

Grab a Bonus

The only “new player” offer I could confirm is a welcome bonus of 3,000,000 Gold Coins. That is a classic social-casino hook, it gives you enough runway to explore a few games before the coin economy starts pushing you toward purchases.

But here is the catch. In my case, the website flow around “free coins” was part of the problem. I repeatedly hit a point where a “free coins” prompt blocked the lobby and I could not get past it, even after reloading. So the bonus exists, but actually getting into the games consistently was my bigger issue.

Bonus Playing Requirements Time Constraints Game Specifics Redemptions
Welcome Bonus: 3,000,000 Gold Coins No wagering. Virtual coins only. NA. General use across the lobby. No redemption, entertainment-only virtual currency.
Coin Bonus: periodic free coin collection (example shown: “Collect 400K”) Claim-based. Virtual coins only. Displayed as every 2 hours in the “How to Play” materials. Triggered from the lobby or bonus areas. No redemption, entertainment-only virtual currency.
Daily Bonus: login streak and daily wheel-style bonus Claim-based. Virtual coins only. Daily cadence, streak-based bonuses shown. Bonus wheel and daily streak UI. No redemption, entertainment-only virtual currency.
Daily Challenges Complete tasks to earn more coins or in-game rewards. Rotates daily based on the challenge panel. Task list shown inside the client UI. No redemption, entertainment-only virtual currency.
Events Event participation for extra rewards. Limited-time, schedule not publicly consistent. Event carousel shown in the lobby UI. No redemption, entertainment-only virtual currency.
Sales (coin packs and offers) Optional purchase offers for virtual items. Limited-time offers, countdown timers shown. “Sale” banners across lobby UI. No redemption, virtual items generally non-refundable.

If you want a sweepstakes-style bonus that actually leads to redemptions, Infinity Slots is the wrong product category. You would do better in a dedicated sweepstakes casino like Sweepjungle, where the whole point is prize redemptions, not just virtual coins.

VIP Program

I did see a “VIP Room” tile inside the lobby visuals, which strongly suggests some kind of VIP gating or perks system. But the actual VIP tier structure, qualification thresholds, and benefits were not clearly explained on the website pages I used.

So I am treating VIP here as “present in the UI, not transparent in the details.” If you are the type of player who cares about VIP levels, perks, and predictable benefits, that lack of clarity is a downside.

I could not investigate this further and find out more info about their VIP structure because everytime I tried, the Website froze or something else didn't work. 

Tiers Benefits Requirements
Not publicly stated  VIP Room access implied, exact perks not clearly listed on-site. Not publicly stated.

If VIP structure matters to you, I would rather use a sweepstakes casino with a more transparent VIP program like SweetSweeps or Smiles Casino because you can usually understand what you are working toward.

Games

Infinity Slots leans hard into a classic “mobile slots collection” feel, lots of themed slot tiles, big icons, and frequent prompts to collect, spin, or open a bonus panel. From what I saw, the lobby includes a mix of fantasy, glamour, and classic Vegas-style themes.

Some games and modes that were clearly shown include:

  • Slots Era, presented as one of the main “choose your fate” experiences.
  • Scatter Holdem Poker, a poker-branded variation within the same ecosystem.
  • Scatter Slots, another flagship mode or sister title.
  • Slot tiles like Wild Valley, Glitz and Glamour, The Wizard, Magic Lake, Venus, Vegas Lightning, Rio, Colossal Dragon, and Fu Dao Wealth shown in the lobby visuals.

One thing I will give Infinity Slots credit for is variety. Even if you only count the visible lobby tiles, you can tell there is a decent spread of themes. This also matches the positioning on the app-store listings, where it is described as having 100+ slot games and frequent updates.

That said, I was reviewing the website experience, and the best game library in the world does not matter if the lobby cannot reliably load or the UI traps you behind pop-ups.

Redemption

Infinity Slots does not run like a sweepstakes casino. There is no Sweeps Coin-style currency and there is no prize catalog or cash equivalent redemption flow. It is a social casino where you play for entertainment using virtual items, not for prizes.

So the redemption process is simple:

  • You do not redeem winnings for cash.
  • You do not redeem winnings for gift cards.
  • You play with virtual coins and virtual items only.

If your goal is to play games and eventually redeem prizes, your time is better spent on an actual sweepstakes platform. I would start with the Sweepstakes Reviews Hub and compare a few options that support prize redemptions.

Purchase options and Tokens

Infinity Slots uses the typical social-casino setup: you can collect some free coins over time, and you can optionally make purchases for additional virtual items. Purchases are tied to virtual items and do not create a cash-out path.

  • Virtual items: coins and other in-game items used only inside the game.
  • Refund posture: generally described as final/non-refundable, with limited exceptions tied to technical delivery issues and payment-provider policies.
  • Currency support: “industry standard” in the sense that it is real-world payment money buying virtual coins, not a redeemable token.

Payment methods and processing:

  • Accepted methods: Visa and Mastercard are shown on-site. Other methods may exist depending on platform, but are not clearly listed on the website pages provided.
  • Processing time: Not publicly stated 
  • Fees: Not publicly stated
  • Processor reference: the Terms reference third-party processing and specifically mention SafeCharge for website payments.

Social Mechanics

Infinity Slots has plenty of on-screen “engagement hooks,” but fewer true community mechanics (at least from the website experience). Here is what stood out to me:

  • Regular freebies: periodic coin claims (example: every 2 hours), daily bonuses, and streak mechanics.
  • Daily challenges: task lists that nudge you to try specific games or behaviors.
  • Events: rotating events highlighted in a carousel, designed to keep you checking in.
  • Sales: timed offers and discount banners designed to convert players to purchases.

What I did not see clearly explained (on the website pages I used) were meaningful peer-to-peer features like gifting, direct player chats, or community competitions with clearly defined leaderboards and prizes. It may exist inside the app ecosystem, but it was not obvious in my web sessions.

Legality & Security

From a compliance standpoint, Infinity Slots is very upfront about what it is: a social casino product meant for entertainment only, with no real money gambling and no opportunity to win real money or prizes of monetary value. It also states you must be the age of majority where you live.

Operator transparency is decent. The website and Terms identify Murka Games Limited, provide a contact email ([email protected]), and list a mailing address in Cyprus. The Terms also include heavy legal provisions like arbitration clauses, class action waiver language, limitation of liability, and a legality requirement that puts responsibility on the user to comply with local laws.

That said, “safe” is not only about legal disclaimers. User trust is also about clarity and usability. When a site repeatedly freezes or blocks you behind pop-ups, it creates a trust gap even if the operator is legitimate.

Responsible Gaming features

On the pages I reviewed, I did not see a clearly surfaced responsible gaming dashboard or prominent self-limiting tools (like spend caps, time-outs, or self-exclusion) designed specifically for the website experience.

What is clear is the positioning: adult audience, entertainment only, and virtual items that cannot be exchanged for money. If you want stronger responsible play controls, I would look for a platform that makes them easy to find, not buried in legal language.

Restricted States Notes
Not publicly stated  The Terms emphasize a legality requirement based on where you access from. Availability may vary by location and platform.

User Experience & Mobile

This is where Infinity Slots lost me.

My website sessions were genuinely painful. Every time I tried to go back to the home page to load the lobby, I ran into a slow, laggy loading screen. On top of that, I repeatedly got stuck on a “And here are some FREE COINS for you” screen that I could not get past, even after refreshing and trying again.

That meant I could not reliably do the one thing I came to do: play the games. For a casino-style site, that is basically a deal-breaker.

We usually do not  do a dedicated rating for website UX, but for this one I feel like I have to, and it is a solid 0/10 based on my experience. Not because the design is ugly, but because the flow was functionally broken for me. A slick lobby graphic does not matter if you cannot get into the lobby.

Mobile compatibility

Infinity Slots appears to be primarily a mobile-first product with established app-store presence, and I can believe it runs better in the native app context than in the browser. But I am not going to pretend the website felt “mobile optimized” in practice. It felt like a web wrapper fighting to load game UI layers.

If you insist on trying it, I would avoid the website and go straight to the official app listing for your device. If you want a sweepstakes experience on mobile, I would rather use a modern sweepstakes platform like RealPrize, which is built around smoother navigation and clearer redemption expectations.

Testimonials

Infinity Slots has a mixed reputation depending on where you look. App-store reviews often praise the graphics and variety, but also mention aggressive prompts to purchase and UI friction. Outside of the official stores, I also found complaints that line up with my broader frustration: when the experience is glitchy or blocks progress, it kills the fun fast.

My takeaway: the “core game content” seems to be what people like. But the user experience, prompts, and reliability issues are what make players bounce. My own website session was firmly in the second camp.

Personal Remark

I went into Infinity Slots expecting a casual social casino, spin a bit, see what the lobby looks like, maybe test a couple of themed slots.

Instead, I spent most of my time fighting the site. The slow loading loops and the “free coins” screen that would not let me continue made me feel like I was trapped in a broken onboarding funnel. Even when I tried to reset by going back home, it just repeated.

I do not mind free coin systems, daily bonuses, or event panels. I actually like those when they are optional. But when a bonus pop-up becomes a hard blocker, it stops being a perk and becomes the entire experience.

If you want a no-stress sweepstakes-style experience, I would not recommend Infinity Slots. If you want a social casino, I would still skip the website and only consider the official app, because the web UX was not usable for me.

Final Score: 3/10

Comprehensive, AI driven ratings system:

Funded Peaks rates sweepstakes on a scale of 1-10, covering five basic categories: Bonuses, Games, Redemption, Social Mechanics and Trust

If a sweepstake casino scores 6 or lower on a category, we suggest alternatives for a better experience (orange bubble)

FP Score — Infinity Slots