Netflix made the heist genre a global obsession. Money Heist ran five seasons. Berlin added two more. Hacksaw Gaming turned coin-reveal mechanics into one of the most copied formats in slots. NetEnt looked at both and decided to build something that borrows from each.
In and Out launched on June 18 with a setup that pulls from multiple directions. The coin-reveal grid mechanic comes straight from Hacksaw’s Le Bandit series. The theme could have been lifted from a Netflix writers’ room. A wealthy French thief named Chloé, a Paris museum at night, velvet ropes, silent alarms, and a heist mode that plays out like cracking a vault one spin at a time.
NetEnt is not hiding the influences. They are betting their own additions make it worth playing.
The Setup
The game opens with Chloé perched on a Parisian rooftop at night, cigarette lit, stolen goods at her feet. The action shifts to a museum interior framed by a sarcophagus on one side and a floating tiara on the other. Noir-inspired visuals. Deep blues and purples. Glowing gold accents. A French ska soundtrack backing the whole thing.
The grid starts at 6×5 but expands up to 8×7 when bomb symbols land on the edges. Wins trigger avalanches, and positions involved in winning combinations get highlighted in tiers: bronze, silver, gold, diamond. Those tiers matter when Heist Mode triggers.
Low-pay symbols cover burglary tools: gloves, flashlight, crowbar, grappling hook. High-pay symbols are the loot itself: necklaces, rings, earrings, gemstones, tiaras. Nothing breaks the heist aesthetic.
Heist Mode Is Where Le Bandit Meets NetEnt
When Chloé lands on a highlighted area, the heist begins.
The game switches to a hold-and-spin format inside the highlighted zone. Le Bandit players will recognize the structure immediately. Coins land with multiplier values tied to their tier: bronze pays 0.5x to 2x, silver pays 4x to 10x, gold pays 15x to 30x, diamond pays 50x to 1,000x. Collectors gather coin values. Multipliers ranging from x2 to x10 boost everything at the end. Extra Life symbols extend the heist.
NetEnt added their own mechanics on top. Upgrader symbols advance adjacent positions to the next tier. Burst symbols convert random positions into highlighted spaces. When Upgrader and Burst appear together, they combine into a Blast effect that fills new positions with coins automatically.
Build a bigger highlighted area before Heist Mode triggers and you get more chances at the 1,000x diamond coins.
Max payout sits at 12,086x. For a medium-volatility slot, that ceiling is unusually high.
The Numbers
In and Out runs at 96.08% RTP with medium volatility and a 24.97% hit frequency. Roughly one in four spins pays out. Sessions stay active even when the big features do not land.
Bets range from €0.20 to €40. NetEnt also includes feature buy options through the Elevate system. Heist Mode costs 20x bet. Free Spins cost 100x. Super Free Spins, which start with a full 8×7 grid, cost 800x.
Those buy-in prices reflect where the variance lives. The base game is medium volatility. The features are where the 12,086x max win hides.
Why the Combination Works
NetEnt borrowed the coin-reveal mechanic from Hacksaw Gaming’s Le Bandit series, added the Money Heist look, and put their own features on top. The full breakdown is on NetEnt’s official In and Out page.
The Le Bandit series proved the cell-activation format works. Players pick it up fast. NetEnt kept that foundation and layered Upgrader, Burst, and Collector symbols on top.
The heist theme is not licensed. No Netflix logo in the corner. No licensing fees, no content rules, and freedom to go hard on the style. The French ska soundtrack, the noir visuals, the rooftop opener. A licensed deal would have killed half of it.
Less risk for NetEnt. Players get a slot that looks like a heist show without the legal strings attached.
What It Means for Players
In and Out is for players who want a good-looking slot with a bonus round that has real depth. Heist Mode is more than a basic hold-and-spin. The tier system rewards patience. The 12,086x max win is high for high-RTP slots at this volatility.
The Money Heist look is on purpose. NetEnt built a slot around that style without paying for it. Whether that matters depends on how much you care about theme versus math.
Players looking to try it can find the game at BC.GAME, which carries the full NetEnt catalogue alongside thousands of other online slots.