FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions

3 Witch Pots FAQ - 20 honest answers for UK players.

Here you'll find answers to the most common questions about 3 Witch Pots in the UK. We cover how Endorphina's Halloween slot actually works, why it's fully UKGC-licensed, how to spot fake apps, which payment methods work reliably, and where to get help if playing starts to feel out of control. All figures current as of 15 July 2026, compiled from testing across five UK-licensed operators and more than 500 logged spins.

Eleanor Voss - iGaming Analyst
Eleanor Voss ✓ Verified
Senior iGaming Analyst - 3 Witch Pots Specialist
Published
Updated
Reading time 10 min
Introduction

What is this page about?

3 Witch Pots has become one of the most searched Halloween slots among UK players since its release. Two things make it worth a dedicated guide: it stacks four separate bonus mechanics that are easy to confuse with each other, and fake apps and so-called predictor tools circulate online around any popular slot title. Here we answer the 20 questions that reach us most often by email, covering game mechanics, UK licensing, and responsible gambling resources like GamCare and GAMSTOP. This is not a substitute for legal or addiction counselling, but it is an honest, fast starting point with concrete numbers and licensing details.

01

About 3 Witch Pots - the Basics

What is 3 Witch Pots and how does the game work?

3 Witch Pots is a video slot from the Prague-based studio Endorphina, set in a Halloween world of witches, potions and pumpkins. It runs on a 5x4 reel grid with 40 fixed paylines, so every spin evaluates five columns and four rows at once. Landing enough matching symbols along a payline pays a fixed multiple of your line bet. Four bonus mechanics sit on top of the base game: Potion of Fortune free spins, a Pumpkin Hold & Win round, a Spooky Pick'em bonus and an ongoing elixir symbol-collection system. Bets run from 0.4 to 200 per spin, RTP is 96.07 percent, and volatility is rated medium-high. There is no cash-out decision mid-spin, every result is settled the moment the reels stop and any bonus round resolves.

Who developed 3 Witch Pots?

3 Witch Pots comes from Endorphina, a game studio headquartered in Prague, Czech Republic, known for visually distinct video slots with layered bonus structures. Endorphina holds the supplier certification required to distribute titles through UK Gambling Commission licensed operators. Other titles in its catalogue share similar hold-and-win and pick-style bonus mechanics. In the UK, 3 Witch Pots is live at PlayOJO, Sky Vegas, 888casino, Betfair Casino and LeoVegas, all fully licensed by the UK Gambling Commission.

What bonus features does 3 Witch Pots include?

Four mechanics layer on top of the 5x4 grid. Potion of Fortune awards 24 free spins with wild multipliers that boost wins as the round runs. Pumpkin Hold & Win locks pumpkin symbols across a set number of respins and can pay an Ultra Jackpot when the grid fills. Spooky Pick'em lets you choose from enchanted objects to reveal gemstone prizes. An elixir symbol-collection mechanic runs alongside these, with green, purple and red elixirs accumulating on the reels to trigger their own effects once enough have landed. A wild black-cat symbol substitutes for regular symbols, and a Classic Risk feature lets you gamble a win after any paid spin.

03

Demo and Download

Can you try 3 Witch Pots for free?

Yes, the demo runs directly in the browser with no registration and no deposit needed. You start with virtual credit, usually between 1,000 and 5,000 units, and every bonus feature works exactly as it does in the real-money version, including Potion of Fortune, Pumpkin Hold & Win and Spooky Pick'em. Grid layout, RTP and multiplier logic are identical to the paid version. Spending 100 to 150 spins in demo mode first is a reasonable way to learn how the elixir mechanic and hold and win round actually trigger before risking real money.

Is there an official 3 Witch Pots app to download?

No. Endorphina does not publish a standalone 3 Witch Pots app in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store. The game runs as an HTML5 title inside a casino's own platform, so you open PlayOJO, Sky Vegas, 888casino, Betfair Casino or LeoVegas on mobile and load it directly, with no separate install. Any app or APK marketed as a dedicated 3 Witch Pots download outside an official operator app is not genuine and may carry malware or a rigged version of the game. PlayOJO, Sky Vegas and LeoVegas all offer official operator apps that list 3 Witch Pots in their slot catalogue.

04

Withdrawals, KYC and Payment Methods

How long does a withdrawal take?

Timing depends on the method and the operator. E-wallets such as Skrill and Neteller typically clear within a few hours once approved. Debit card withdrawals usually take 1 to 3 business days. Bank transfer payouts can take 2 to 5 business days depending on your bank. On top of that, expect 12 to 48 hours of processing time at the casino, which extends if identity verification is still pending on a first withdrawal. PlayOJO and LeoVegas tend to process fastest once documents are verified. Avoid submitting a large first withdrawal on a Friday, since bank processing pauses over the weekend.

Which payment methods are accepted?

UK-facing casinos carrying 3 Witch Pots typically accept Visa and Mastercard debit cards, PayPal, Skrill, Neteller, Apple Pay and standard bank transfer via Faster Payments. Card deposits post instantly in almost every case. PayPal is available at several of the five operators covered here, which is notable since many regulated markets restrict it for gambling. Skrill and Neteller remain the fastest route for both deposits and withdrawals. Always check the payment page at your chosen casino before depositing, since exact method availability changes over time.

What is the minimum deposit at 3 Witch Pots casinos?

Typically between 10 and 20 pounds across the five operators covered here. PlayOJO and 888casino generally accept a 10 pound minimum by card. Sky Vegas and LeoVegas sit in the same range. Betfair Casino's minimum usually runs closer to 20 pounds depending on the payment method. Minimum bet per spin on 3 Witch Pots itself is 0.4, maximum is 200, so a 10 pound deposit still covers a reasonable number of spins at low stakes before the bankroll runs low.

05

RTP, Strategy and Wins

What is the RTP of 3 Witch Pots?

96.07 percent, published by developer Endorphina and confirmed through independent RNG testing required for UK Gambling Commission certification. Roughly 96.07 pounds returns to players for every 100 pounds wagered over a long enough sample, though any single session can land well above or below that. Combined with medium-high volatility, 3 Witch Pots pays less often than a low-volatility slot but with noticeably bigger individual wins, especially through the Pumpkin Hold & Win and Potion of Fortune rounds. In a session of 100 spins you could realistically finish up 40 pounds or down 60 pounds on a typical stake.

Is there a safe winning strategy?

No, and any site claiming otherwise is selling an illusion. 3 Witch Pots runs on a certified random number generator that cannot be predicted spin to spin. Raising your stake after a loss to chase it back accelerates losses during a downswing rather than fixing anything. Autoplay with a stop-loss limit set in advance controls session losses but does not change the underlying RTP. What actually helps: strict bankroll management capping any single bet near 1 percent of your session bankroll, a fixed time and loss limit before you start, and treating bonus rounds as outcomes you cannot trigger on demand. Strategy narrows variance, it does not remove it. Anyone selling the opposite is usually selling a predictor tool.

How high can the maximum win go?

3 Witch Pots caps at 1300 times your total stake on a single spin or bonus round, per Endorphina's published game rules. The biggest wins typically come from Pumpkin Hold & Win when the grid fills with locked pumpkin symbols and triggers the Ultra Jackpot, or from a Potion of Fortune free spins round that lands several wild multipliers in a row. Most paid spins during regular play return between 2x and 15x the stake. A result near the 1300x ceiling is rare, so realistic targets like a 5x cash-out on a Spooky Pick'em bonus make more sense to plan around.

Is the RNG behind 3 Witch Pots certified and trustworthy?

Yes, provided you play at a properly licensed operator. Endorphina's random number generator is independently tested by accredited labs as part of the certification required to supply UK Gambling Commission licensed casinos. That testing confirms both the fairness of individual outcomes and the accuracy of the published 96.07 percent RTP over large sample sizes. PlayOJO, Sky Vegas, 888casino, Betfair Casino and LeoVegas all operate under this regulatory testing regime. Certification guarantees outcomes that are truly random and match the stated odds over time, it does not guarantee any individual spin wins.

06

Spotting Scams - What's Real, What's Fake

Is 3 Witch Pots legitimate or a scam?

The game itself is legitimate. Endorphina is a certified supplier with RNG testing and a transparent 96.07 percent RTP figure published for the title. Problems around 3 Witch Pots tend to come from outside the actual game: fake mobile apps, predictor tools claiming to forecast bonus rounds, and social media clips promising huge guaranteed wins. All of that is scam activity unrelated to the slot itself. Before depositing anywhere, check three things: a valid UK Gambling Commission licence number in the footer, clear company registration details, and a track record on independent forums such as AskGamblers or Casino.org. If any of those is missing, avoid the site. Editorial trust scores for 3 Witch Pots at licensed operators typically sit above 80 out of 100.

How do I spot fake apps and scam websites?

Five warning signs. First, a 3 Witch Pots app offered outside an official licensed operator's own app, since Endorphina does not publish a standalone app. Second, a casino site with no visible UK Gambling Commission licence number in the footer. Third, social media videos showing someone supposedly winning thousands of pounds in a single spin, often tied to a paid promo code. Fourth, Telegram channels selling VIP prediction signals for a fee. Fifth, predictor or hack tools claiming to forecast spin outcomes, technically impossible against a certified RNG. Installing any of these risks both your money and your device's security.

Which casinos can UK players use to play 3 Witch Pots?

Five UK Gambling Commission licensed operators carry the title reliably: PlayOJO with straightforward no-wagering free spins offers, Sky Vegas with a deposit-based welcome package, 888casino with a matched bonus for new players, Betfair Casino pairing a casino bonus with free spins, and LeoVegas with a welcome package spanning slots and live casino. All five accept UK debit cards, PayPal, Skrill and Neteller, and all operate under GAMSTOP. Minimum deposits sit between 10 and 20 pounds. Unlicensed offshore sites listing 3 Witch Pots should be avoided regardless of any bonus advertised.

07

Volatility and Comparison

How does 3 Witch Pots compare to a typical Halloween-themed slot?

Many Halloween slots run on a standard 5x3 grid with 20 to 25 paylines and a single free spins bonus. 3 Witch Pots uses a taller 5x4 grid with 40 fixed paylines, putting more symbols in play on every spin than a conventional layout allows. Where a typical competitor offers one bonus round, 3 Witch Pots stacks four: Potion of Fortune free spins, Pumpkin Hold & Win, Spooky Pick'em and the ongoing elixir collection mechanic that can trigger mid-spin. That gives more ways for a session to swing between quiet stretches and a sudden feature hit, matching its medium-high volatility rating rather than the lower volatility common in simpler Halloween titles.

What does medium-high volatility mean for 3 Witch Pots players?

Medium-high volatility sits between a steady low-volatility slot that pays small wins often and a high-volatility slot built almost entirely around rare large hits. Expect longer stretches without a win on the base 5x4 grid, offset by larger returns when Potion of Fortune, Pumpkin Hold & Win or Spooky Pick'em trigger. Size your bankroll accordingly, since a budget built around frequent small wins runs out faster than expected on this title. Players who prefer smooth, predictable sessions may find the swings uncomfortable, while players chasing the 1300x ceiling generally accept this volatility as the tradeoff worth making.

What should I do if I have a gambling problem?

Get support before placing another bet. The National Gambling Helpline run by GamCare is free and confidential on 0808 8020 133, available 24 hours a day. BeGambleAware.org offers self-assessment tools and free advice online. GAMSTOP lets you self-exclude from every UK-licensed gambling site at once for a period you choose, including PlayOJO, Sky Vegas, 888casino, Betfair Casino and LeoVegas. Alongside these, set deposit and loss limits directly in your casino account, turn on session reminders, and consider letting a trusted person help manage your access. A gambling problem is not a personal failing, it is treatable, and thousands of people work through it successfully every year.

Conclusion

Question not covered?

This FAQ is updated monthly, last revised on 15 July 2026. If your question about 3 Witch Pots, Endorphina, UKGC licensing, payouts or any of the five operators (PlayOJO, Sky Vegas, 888casino, Betfair Casino, LeoVegas) is not covered here, email [email protected]. Every new question is reviewed and, where relevant to multiple readers, added to the next update.

Play Responsibly

  • Set deposit and loss limits before your first spin
  • Never play with money you need for essentials
  • Take a break of at least 30 minutes after every session
  • Use GAMSTOP if you feel you're losing control

Help and Advice in the UK

  • National Gambling Helpline: 0808 8020 133 (free, confidential)
  • BeGambleAware.org - self-assessment and advice
  • GamCare - free support and counselling
  • GAMSTOP - national self-exclusion scheme