Last updated: 11-07-2026
Big Bass Splash 1000, released December 2025, is the newest entry in Pragmatic Play's long-running fishing-themed franchise, and it makes a genuinely counterintuitive design choice: individual Money Symbols are now capped at 1,000x, down from the original Big Bass Splash's 5,000x per-fish ceiling — yet the overall max win climbed to 25,000x, five times higher than the original's 5,000x. That's not a contradiction once you understand the Fisherman Wild's new level-up system, which is where the actual aggregate potential now lives.
Why lowering the fish cap actually raised the max win
The core collection mechanic works the same way it always has in the Big Bass series: Money Symbols — fish carrying a value from 2x up to the new 1,000x cap — appear on the 5x3 grid, and the Fisherman Wild collects the value of any visible Money Symbol when it appears on the reels. What's new in the 1000 version is a four-level progression system tied to the Fisherman Wild — each successful collection stage pushes the Fisherman up a level, and each level unlocks a higher multiplier applied to subsequent Money Symbol collections, up to a maximum 10x multiplier at the top tier. The aggregate math works out like this: a 1,000x fish collected while the Fisherman sits at the maximum level multiplier becomes 10,000x on its own, and across a free spins round with 25 potential spins and several collection events compounding through the level system, the total climbs to the published 25,000x ceiling — a genuinely different mechanism from simply capping individual fish higher, as the original version did. This level-based approach also means the Fisherman's progress carries genuine informational value mid-round: a player watching the level indicator climb toward its maximum tier has real reason for growing anticipation, in a way that simply waiting for another high-value fish to land under the original's flat-cap system never quite offered.
This redesign changes what a "big win" actually looks like on the 1000 version compared to its predecessor. On the original Big Bass Splash, one exceptionally lucky single fish worth 5,000x could define an entire session's result. On the 1000 version, no single fish can exceed 1,000x on its own — the big outcomes now require sustained collection across multiple spins as the Fisherman climbs the level system, which is a more gradual, build-up style of big win rather than one dramatic single-symbol hit. Whether that's a preferable structure is a matter of taste, but it's worth understanding clearly before assuming the two versions behave the same way just because they share a name and franchise.
| Feature | Original Big Bass Splash | Big Bass Splash 1000 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual fish cap | 5,000x | 1,000x | Lowered — but see level multiplier below for why this doesn't mean a lower overall ceiling. |
| Fisherman level multiplier | Not present | Up to 10x at max level (4-tier progression) | New mechanic — the actual source of the 1000 version's higher ceiling. |
| Max win | 5,000x | 25,000x | 5x higher despite the lower individual fish cap. |
| RTP | Not directly comparable (older release) | 96.52% (default) | Operator variants of 95.51% and 94.53% also documented for the 1000 version. |
| Hit frequency | Not directly comparable | 13.64% (win every ~7.3 spins) | Very high volatility — long dry stretches are the norm. |
Author's tip from Connor Blake, Independent iGaming Reviewer & Player Safety Analyst: "Don't judge this game by the individual fish values you see landing early in a free spins round — a 200x or 400x fish looks unremarkable on its own, but if the Fisherman is already at level 3 or 4 when it lands, that same fish is worth several times more than the number printed on it. Watch the Fisherman's level indicator, not just the fish values themselves."
Released on December 8, 2025, Big Bass Splash 1000 is genuinely one of the newest titles referenced anywhere on this site, which is worth flagging for a different reason too: newly released titles sometimes see their published RTP and volatility figures refined slightly in the weeks following launch as operators and the developer fine-tune the configuration based on early player data. The figures covered on this page reflect the game's stated specifications at release, and checking the in-game paytable remains the reliable way to confirm exactly what's running at any given casino, especially for a title this recent.
Buy Bonus pricing, Ante Bet, and the five pre-spin modifiers
Two Buy Bonus routes exist. The Regular Buy costs 100x your stake and runs at the same 96.52% RTP as natural play — at a A$1 bet, that's A$100 for direct access to the free spins round. The Super Buy costs 450x your stake — A$450 at the same A$1 bet — and specifically improves the probability of higher-value Money Symbols appearing during the round, making it a targeted way to chase the level-multiplier compounding described above rather than simply skipping the wait. Ante Bet is also available, doubling your total stake (moving the effective bet range from A$0.10–A$250 up to A$0.20–A$500) in exchange for improved bonus trigger odds, following the same general trade-off pattern covered on other Pragmatic Play titles across this site.
One detail specific to this title worth understanding: before the free spins round even begins, one of five random pre-bonus modifiers can activate, each altering the round's starting conditions. These can add extra Fishermen (meaning more simultaneous collectors working the grid), extra Money Symbols on the board at the start, a starting level boost for the Fisherman's multiplier tier, or additional bonus spins beyond the base 10/15/20 awarded for 3/4/5 scatters. None of these are things you can trigger deliberately — they're assigned randomly once the bonus round is reached — but knowing they exist explains why two free spins rounds that both start from an apparently similar trigger can produce wildly different outcomes from the very first spin.
Author's tip from Connor Blake, Independent iGaming Reviewer & Player Safety Analyst: "The Super Buy at 450x is a genuinely large single purchase — A$450 at a A$1 bet — and it only improves the odds of higher-value fish appearing, not the level multiplier system itself. If your bankroll is limited, the Regular Buy at 100x or simply waiting for a natural trigger are both more proportionate ways to experience this game than committing to the Super tier."
Responsible play
Very high volatility combined with a 13.64% hit frequency means dry stretches of seven-plus spins between any win at all are the statistical norm here, not a sign of bad luck specifically. Size your session bankroll with that in mind, and treat the 25,000x max win — reachable only through a rare combination of level progression and Money Symbol values — as a long-shot outcome rather than a plan. The wide bet range, stretching from A$0.10 up to A$250 without Ante Bet or A$500 with it engaged, means this title is accessible to a broad range of bankroll sizes, but very high volatility applies at every stake level equally — a smaller bet doesn't reduce the relative length of a dry stretch, it only reduces the absolute AUD cost of riding one out. Players must be 18 or over. If gambling has stopped feeling like entertainment, Gambling Help Online is available 24/7 at 1800 858 858.
For a comparably structured progressive-style ceiling, Mega Moolah covers a genuinely different jackpot mechanic worth understanding alongside this title's level-up system, while Sugar Rush 1000 offers a comparable "1000" upgrade approach from the same Pragmatic Play stable. For everything else, visit the Ozwin homepage, or if you already have an account, the login page gets you in quickly. New to terms like RTP, volatility, or hit frequency? The glossary explains them all in plain language.

