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Fish Shooting Games at Spinrise Casino

Updated on June 27, 2026 by the editorial team

Fish shooting games at Spinrise Casino swap spinning reels for a target and a trigger. You aim a cannon at fish drifting across the screen, fire, and the bigger or rarer the catch, the more your bet multiplies. Every title runs in Canadian dollars, so a C$10 deposit gets you shooting straight away, and C$20 unlocks the C$750 + 200 FS welcome package. This page shows exactly what these arcade games pay, how a session turns into a withdrawal, and which titles are worth loading first.

If you have never fired a shot, do not worry. Most fish games sit under the arcade section of the games hub, they all have a demo you can practise with, and the controls take about thirty seconds to learn. Below you will find bet ranges, RTP figures, a table of the popular titles in the lobby, and honest answers to what players ask before their first round.

Dead or Alive 2
NetEnt RTP 96.82%
Crazy Time
Evolution
Sweet Bonanza
Pragmatic Play RTP 96.51%
Gates of Olympus
Pragmatic Play RTP 96.50%

What you actually get when you shoot instead of spin

Fish games are arcade shooters dressed as casino play. Instead of matching symbols on paylines, you control a cannon on an underwater scene and shoot at fish that swim past. Each fish carries a multiplier value. Land enough hits to kill it and your stake is multiplied by that number, then paid straight to your balance.

The appeal is control. A slot spins on its own once you press the button. Here you choose where to aim, when to fire, and how much ammo to spend per shot. Small fish die in one or two rounds and pay modest multipliers. The giant boss creatures soak up a lot of ammunition but can return dozens or hundreds of times a single shot when they finally go down.

Most titles are multiplayer. You share the tank with other shooters in real time, all firing at the same fish, and the game tracks who lands the killing blow. Some rounds throw in special weapons, drills, lightning chains or bombs that clear a whole area at once. That mix of skill and chance is why the format pulls players who find pure slots too passive.

What it gives you in practice: shorter, faster rounds you steer yourself, and a payout that responds to how you play rather than a fixed spin. You will not out-aim the maths over the long run, but session to session your decisions matter more here than on a reel game.

From first shot to money in your account

Getting a real-money fish session going takes a few minutes. Follow this order and your winnings stay clean:

  1. Create your account. Enter your email, a password and your province. It runs about two minutes.
  2. Deposit at least C$20. The floor is C$10, but C$20 is what activates the welcome package. Interac and crypto credit instantly.
  3. Open a fish game and set your ammo. Pick a bet-per-shot your balance can sustain for a few hundred rounds. Cheap shots last longer against the boss.
  4. Shoot with a plan. Thin out small fish for steady returns, then commit heavier fire to a big target only when the room has already softened it up.
  5. Clear any bonus wagering before cashing out. Bonus and deposit funds carry x35 playthrough, free-spin winnings x40, both inside 10 days. Real-money winnings with no bonus attached are free to withdraw.
  6. Request your payout. The minimum withdrawal is C$20, and crypto lands near-instantly once approved.

Keep one figure in mind before a big night: the standard daily withdrawal ceiling is C$500 per day, climbing to C$1,500 for higher VIP tiers. A large fish-game haul above that gets paid in daily instalments unless you have moved up. Size your ambitions around it.

Verification is a one-time step. Before the first payout Spinrise asks for a government-issued photo ID, proof of address from the last 90 days, and sometimes confirmation of the payment method you used. Upload clear scans and the check usually clears in 24 to 48 hours. Read more on the games page or the payments block in the footer.

How much you can really win: bets, RTP and the maths

Return to player works the same in fish games as it does on slots. RTP is the long-run share of all wagers a game pays back across millions of shots. Most fish titles publish an RTP in the 95% to 97% band, so over time they hold roughly three to five cents on the dollar. That figure says nothing about your next round, only about the long average.

Bet sizing is where fish games differ. You do not stake per spin, you stake per shot, and you fire many shots per minute. A bet of C$0.10 a shot sounds tiny until you realise a busy player unloads dozens of them chasing one boss. Multiply it out before you sit down. Set the per-shot amount low if you want a long session, higher only if you are comfortable burning through ammo fast in exchange for bigger multiplier hits.

The multipliers are the draw. Small fish return a fraction of your shot up to a few times it. Mid-tier targets pay tens of times. The rare boss creatures and special-weapon jackpots can pay hundreds of times a single shot, though killing one costs a stack of ammunition and often needs the whole room firing together. High reward, high burn. That is the honest trade.

One practical rule beats any aiming trick: decide your session budget first, convert it into shots at your chosen bet, and stop when the ammo is spent. Because you fire so fast, a fish game drains a balance quicker than a slot if you let it. Treat the RTP as the ceiling on your long-run return, not a promise for tonight, and the format stays fun instead of frustrating. If you want a slower burn, the online slots lobby and high-RTP slots pace themselves differently.

The fish titles worth loading first

The Spinrise arcade section carries a rotating set of fish shooters from the studios that supply the wider lobby. The table lists the popular ones with their bet range and published RTP, so you can match a game to your bankroll before you fire a shot.

Fish gameStudio styleBet per shot (from)RTP (published)
Fishin' FrenzyReel Time / classicC$0.1096.12%
Big Bass BonanzaPragmatic PlayC$0.1096.71%
Fish CatchArcade shooterC$0.1096.00%
Ocean KingMultiplayer shooterC$0.0195.50%
Royal FishingArcade shooterC$0.1096.20%
Bombing FishingArcade shooterC$0.1096.30%

Treat these numbers as a starting map, not a fixed contract. Studios sometimes ship a title in more than one RTP or bet configuration, and the figure live on the game's own info screen during your session is the one that pays. Open it and confirm before you commit real ammo.

Which to load first depends on what you want from the night. The Fishin' Frenzy and Big Bass families play like slot-hybrid shooters, gentler on a small balance. The true multiplayer boss titles such as Ocean King reward patience and a crowded room. Start on demo, learn the weapon controls, then bring cash to the game that suits your budget.

Questions players ask before their first round

Can I try fish games for free before I bet real money?

Yes. Almost every fish title at Spinrise has a demo mode that runs on play credits with no deposit, so you can learn the cannon controls and special weapons first. Switch to real money when you are ready. The C$750 + 200 FS welcome package only applies after you deposit at least C$20.

How do bets work in a fish shooting game?

You stake per shot rather than per spin, and you fire many shots per round. Bets often start around C$0.10 a shot, with some multiplayer titles going as low as C$0.01. Because you fire fast, work out your total spend before you start: a low per-shot bet stretches the session, a higher one chases bigger multiplier hits faster.

Are fish games based on skill or luck?

Both. You control aim, timing and how much ammo you spend, which gives the format more agency than a slot. Underneath, each fish carries a random multiplier and the outcome is still governed by the game's RTP, published in the 95% to 97% band on most titles. Skill affects your efficiency, not the long-run maths.

How much can I win, and are there payout limits?

Rare boss creatures and special-weapon jackpots can pay hundreds of times a single shot, though they cost heavy ammunition to land. Withdrawals run to a standard C$500 per day, rising to C$1,500 for higher VIP tiers, so a very large haul is paid in daily instalments unless you have climbed the levels. The minimum withdrawal is C$20.

How fast do fish-game winnings reach me?

After a withdrawal is approved, crypto is near-instant, Interac and e-wallets arrive within 24 hours, cards take 1 to 3 business days, and bank transfers up to 5. Pending review runs 24 to 72 hours, processed Monday to Friday. Your first payout also needs KYC, which usually clears in 24 to 48 hours.

Chris Carter
Reviewed byChris CarterCasino & bonus analyst

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