Outsourced Slash Game: Slot Overview
When cryptocurrency burst on the scene, thanks mostly to Bitcoin, it was meant to do a lot of things. Innovate finance, decentralise stuff, bank the unbanked and so on and so forth. At this stage, it's up for debate as to whether crypto has achieved its loftier goals, but one thing it has given gamblers is crash games. You know, the ones where, say, a little spaceship flies to the moon while a bet multiplier racks up, you press stop and collect the winnings. Or, it crashes before you get a chance to stop, and the bet is lost. Still quite niche in some ways, crash games have nevertheless crossed over to the mainstream thanks to releases like Big Bass Crash or Spaceman, both from Pragmatic Play.

Competitor Nolimit City has gotten in on the crash act as well, whether by defying death (or ending in a grave) in Skate or Die, as well as earlier in Outsourced - before the crash game element was later pulled. However, one hand taketh, one hand giveth back, and one hand getith sliced to bits because Nolimit City's mysterious new 'Lab' project has repackaged the Slash Game from Outsourced and made it a stand-alone experience. Titled Outsourced Slash Game, players are able to experience crash gaming Nolimit City style, and yes, there will very likely be blood.
First thing first is picking a stake of $/€1 to $/€1,000 per game round. This is the only betting decision to make since there are no Bet Boosters or Nolimit Bonus buys in this game. Three RTP options have been created, where a 96% version offers the highest theoretical return value while the volatility is rated 6 out of 10, or medium. There's nothing medium about the gameplay, however, as it can buck and kick all over the place. A scoreboard displays top wins, top misses, and the result of the last game round. Time to see how the Handjob machine works. Yes, the Handjob machine.
Outsourced Slash Game: Slot Features

If you're used to getting a headache after trying to deduce how a Nolimit City slot functions, then Outsourced Slash Game is the complete opposite of that. How it works is simple. When ready, players press the go button, which, after a countdown, causes a laser to start tracing the outline of a hand. While the laser is moving, a bet multiplier continually increases.
If you press the Stop button before the hand is cut, you win whatever multiplier was in view, from 1.01x to 1,500x. In this case, the game will show you what the highest possible outcome would have been, if not achieved. If the laser cuts the hand immediately or before tapping out, the bet is lost.

Outsourced Slash Game: Slot Verdict
Crash games can be brutal in their own right, but the original Slash Game was particularly so - it was accessible after achieving the game's 5,000x MAKS WIN (or by paying 5,000x the bet), then putting the whole MAKS WIN on the line in the Slash Game phase. Exceptionally righteous for any gambler with the cast iron cajónes (and luck) to hold on to the very end and turn 5,000x to 50,000x. Tough shite for anyone else who didn't tap out quickly enough and lost the whole lot. It was a controversial add-on, you could say, and perhaps the controversy was enough to see the feature sliced off. The Skate or Die version of the Crasher Game was less demanding in some ways, yet still, these sorts of crash features aren't to all tastes.
Neither will Outsourced Slash Game's version likely be, but players should have a clear idea of what they're getting themselves into should they decide to risk digital digits for potential glory. Full glory in Outsourced Slash Game has been reigned in, and now, players with the cast iron cajónes (and luck) can take things all the way to 1,500x their bet (1:1,563 rounds). Like any crash game, though, making it to the very end is not an easy task. Punters pretty much have to be prepared to push every single game round to its absolute conclusion and be prepared to deal with multiple losses along the way if they want to chase the ultimate result. Watching cartoon hands get chopped up in demo mode is amusing, though no doubt it's tougher on the nerves IRL with actual dough on the line. But, if players like this sort of thing, if it ticks their (responsible) risk/reward boxes, then Outsourced Slash Game offers a ride that can seesaw between fist through-the-door frustration and killer rush, and back again.
Outsourced Slash Game delivers a ride that's able to alternate between killer rush and controller-breaking frustration with diabolical ease.
