bonus-buy studies / sugar rush
bonus-buy study, simulation-based

Sugar Rush bonus buy: 77.65% of buys returned less than they cost

Across 100,000 simulated 100x buys, 77.65% of Sugar Rush bonus buys returned less than they cost. The median buy returned 0.32x its cost, while the average matched the 96.5% RTP, carried by rare big hits.

Model basis: feature-round returns are modelled as a calibrated heavy-tailed (capped log-normal) distribution, mean set to 96.5% (base RTP (buy RTP not published, modelled, flagged)), tail scaled to the 5,000x ceiling. Providers do not publish feature-round distributions, so this is a model, not observed data, flagged per our methodology.

What we modelled

fieldvalue
providerPragmatic Play
base RTP96.5%
buy options100x
max win5,000x
simulated100,000 buys per option

What a 100x buy actually returns

distribution of returns from a feature buy

Distribution

return band (x buy cost)% of buys
0-0.5x61.77%
0.5-1x15.88%
1-2x11.29%
2-5x7.8%
5-10x2.16%
10-50x1.05%
50x+0.05%

The honest read

A bonus buy is a single high-variance bet. The average is not the typical outcome: most buys here returned less than they cost, and the rare big multipliers that lift the average are exactly that, rare. Buying the feature does not improve your odds, it pays to skip to them. 18+, this is analysis, not betting advice.

FAQ

Is buying the bonus on Sugar Rush worth it?

On average a buy returns its RTP (96.5%), the same house edge as base play, so buying the feature does not improve your odds. In our 100,000-buy simulation 77.65% of buys returned less than they cost. We report the outcome; we never tell you to buy.

What is the most a Sugar Rush bonus buy paid?

In 100,000 simulated buys the biggest single return was 50x the buy (5,000x stake). Reaching the 5,000x ceiling happened on 0.048% of buys. Big hits are rare; the typical (median) buy returned 0.32x its cost.

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