

There’s a strange comfort to Double Rainbow. At first, you’re not entirely sure what you’re looking at. Bright colors, floating clouds, a kind of pastel-on-acid palette — it all feels more playful than serious. But after a few rounds, it clicks. Hacksaw Gaming wasn’t trying to make a traditional slot here. They leaned fully into absurdity, and somehow, it works.
If you’ve played anything from Hacksaw before — say, Chaos Crew or Stack’em — you’ll know they have a thing for making weird stuff fun. With Double Rainbow, they dialed the volatility way down but turned the charm way up. This is not your high-stakes, adrenaline-packed monster. It’s low-stress, almost meditative in a very loud way.
The game runs on a 6×4 layout with cluster pays. There are no paylines. Instead, wins come from clusters of five or more matching symbols. No reels — just symbols falling from the sky like candy. And yes, rainbows.
To be honest, most of the time you’re just spinning and watching colors stack up. But here’s what keeps it interesting:
Cloud multipliers appear randomly and attach themselves to reels
If you land the same color cloud multiple times, the multiplier grows
Double Rainbow Bonus: all seven cloud colors appear and stay active
Single and Triple Rainbow rounds trigger occasionally with boosted potential
And that’s the thing — when the game decides to wake up, it wakes up fast. Multipliers combine. Colors lock. Suddenly you’re looking at a screen filled with joyfully chaotic nonsense and a surprising win.
Feature | Detail |
---|---|
Layout | 6 x 4 |
Win Type | Cluster Pays |
Volatility | Low-Medium |
Max Win | ~5,000x |
Bonus Rounds | Yes – 3 types |
Mobile Friendly | Fully responsive |
That depends. If you’re chasing massive hits and high-volatility risk, look elsewhere. Double Rainbow isn’t built for that. But if you’re in the mood for something light, colorful, and occasionally surprising — maybe while decompressing after a rougher session — this slot does the trick.
Some players will call it boring. Others will find it oddly addictive. Hacksaw didn’t set out to make a classic here. They made a weird little joy machine. And sometimes, weird is exactly what you need.