WowPot Jackpot Explained
WowPot is the higher-volatility sibling of Mega Moolah. Both run on the Games Global network, but WowPot seeds at 21,4M kr, drops less often, and pays substantially larger prizes when it hits. Here is exactly how the network works and how to read its current state.
Network structure
WowPot is a four-tier progressive network: WowPot (Mega), Major, Minor, and Mini. The Mega tier is what most players chase - it seeds at 21,4M kr and has no cap. Every WowPot-branded slot in the Games Global catalogue contributes to the same underlying pool, so a spin on Book of Atem WowPot feeds the same jackpot as a spin on 9 Masks of Fire WowPot.
The network reaches hundreds of licensed operators worldwide, which is why the pool climbs quickly between drops. Games Global publishes the live value across all connected casinos - it is the same number wherever you play.
How the jackpot triggers
WowPot uses a bonus-game trigger, not a random per-spin trigger. To have a chance at the Mega, you first need to land the jackpot wheel bonus. Inside that wheel, all four tiers are represented; where the wheel stops decides which prize you win. This is a different model from Mega Moolah, which can trigger on any spin at any bet.
Bet size affects your probability of entering the bonus wheel, but once you are in, every tier is on the table regardless of stake. The published RTP of each WowPot slot includes the jackpot contribution.
Cycle length and average drop
Across the last several years, WowPot Mega has averaged a drop roughly every 90 days, but the range is wide. It has hit as quickly as 40 days and dragged out to over 600 days. The most recent record drop landed at 150 kr.6M in June 2026 after a 627-day drought - one of the longest in the network's history.
The wide range is why WowPot rewards patience. Sessions when the pool sits well above the historical average carry meaningfully higher expected value per spin than sessions right after a reset.
How to tell if WowPot is worth chasing right now
Use our live WowPot tracker - it shows the current pool, days since the last drop, and where it sits versus the historical mean. When it is flagged Hot or Super Hot, the pool is sitting above the average drop value. When it is Cold, it recently paid out and is closer to its 21,4M kr seed.
For a deeper primer on how progressive networks work, see our progressive jackpots explainer.
WowPot vs Mega Moolah - which to play?
Both sit on the same Games Global infrastructure but suit different playing styles. Mega Moolah's random trigger and 66-day average cycle make it feel more active - you can win the Mega on any spin. WowPot's bonus-wheel trigger and longer cycle make it feel like a slower burn with a bigger payoff. If you are chasing life-changing money and can be patient, WowPot when it is hot is the higher-EV bet. If you want faster action and a shorter cycle, Mega Moolah is the pick.
