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RIP City vs Stack 'em

RIP City wins on certified RTP with 96.30% vs 96.27% on Stack 'em — a 0.03 percentage-point edge. Both titles are from Hacksaw Gaming, so the certified-variant ladder rules are the same — only the operator deployment differs.

Last verified: 28 May 2026

Hacksaw Gaming · 2022

RIP City

RTP_WINNER
Certified RTP
96.30%
Lowest variant
96.30%
Variants
1
Category
slot
Volatility
Very High
Max win
25,000x stake
View RIP City audit →

Hacksaw Gaming · 2022

Stack 'em

Certified RTP
96.27%
Lowest variant
96.27%
Variants
1
Category
slot
Volatility
Very High
Max win
30,000x stake
View Stack 'em audit →

Verdict

RIP City wins on certified RTP with 96.30% vs 96.27% on Stack 'em — a 0.03 percentage-point edge. Over the long run that means RIP City retains 0.03% more of every wager for the player versus Stack 'em, when both are running their certified ceiling variants. On a $100 stake repeated 1,000 times, that's an extra $0.30 returned statistically.

Important: the certified ceiling is only what you'll see at operators that deploy the highest variant. RIP City ships in 1 variant, Stack 'em in 1. Operator choice can wipe out an RTP advantage on the headline figure — always check the in-game info panel.

RIP City vs Stack 'em — FAQ

Which has the better RTP: RIP City or Stack 'em?

RIP City wins on certified RTP with 96.30% vs 96.27% on Stack 'em — a 0.03 percentage-point edge.

What are the main differences between RIP City and Stack 'em?

RIP City (Hacksaw Gaming, 2022) is a very high volatility slot, certified at 96.30% RTP. Stack 'em (Hacksaw Gaming, 2022) is a very high volatility slot, certified at 96.27% RTP. Both come from Hacksaw Gaming, so the certified-variant policies are similar.

Should I play RIP City or Stack 'em?

If pure return-to-player is your only criterion, pick the higher certified RTP and find a casino that deploys it at the ceiling. If volatility and max-win cap matter, compare the volatility and max-win values in the table below — those drive bankroll behaviour far more than the RTP differential.