Sweet Bonanza Bonus Buy — Is It Worth 100×?
The Bonus Buy costs exactly 100× your current stake. At €1 per spin, that's €100 for one guaranteed entry into the Free Spins round. The question every player asks: does the average bonus return cover that cost?
How Bonus Buy Works
Click the orange 'Buy Feature' button on the left side of the screen. The game deducts 100× your stake and immediately launches 10 free spins with multiplier bombs active. The Free Spins mechanics are identical to organically triggered ones — same bomb values, same retrigger rules, same max win. The RTP during Bonus Buy is 96.48%, same as standard play.
Ante Bet vs Bonus Buy — Side by Side
Ante Bet adds 25% to your stake (€1.25 instead of €1) and doubles the Free Spins trigger probability. At doubled probability, you'd expect to trigger the bonus every ~21 spins instead of ~43. That's roughly 21 × €1.25 = €26.25 in total cost per bonus, plus you collect base game wins along the way. Bonus Buy costs €100 flat with zero base game wins. The Ante Bet route is cheaper on average but requires patience. Bonus Buy is for players who want instant access and don't mind the higher cost.
Break-Even Analysis
To break even on a 100× Bonus Buy, your Free Spins need to return at least 100× your base stake. Community average is 40-80× (some sources cite 6× average relative to total bet, which at 100× buy price means a net loss of ~94× per purchase on average). The math is harsh: most bonus purchases lose money. The rare big hit (200×, 500×, 1000×+) compensates statistically over thousands of purchases, but for any individual session, buying the bonus is a high-variance gamble on top of an already volatile game.
When Bonus Buy Makes Sense
If your goal is to see what the Free Spins round feels like without waiting, and you're comfortable with the cost. If you have a limited session time and want maximum bonus exposure in 30 minutes instead of 3 hours. If you understand that buying 10 bonuses at €100 each (€1,000 total) will most likely return less than €1,000. It's a convenience fee, not a profitable strategy.