Space Slots
2 UK slots with the Space theme
Space and sci-fi slots explore galaxies, alien encounters and futuristic technology. Neon aesthetics, extraterrestrial symbols and warp-speed cascade mechanics define the look and feel of this category.

Money Train 2
Relax Gaming
Money Train 2 arrives with a name that tells you exactly what sort of slot identity it's chasing: cash, motion and sequel energy, all wrapped into a 5-reel release from Relax Gaming. For a UK slots audience, that already gives it a clear place on the shelf. This is the kind of game title that leans on recognisable branding rather than mystery, and that directness matters when players are scanning a crowded lobby. On theme and visual style, the supplied data points to a game built around the Money Train name first and foremost. That gives the reviewable identity a hard-edged, industrial feel on paper, with the train motif doing most of the branding work and the "2" signalling a follow-up rather than a standalone concept. Relax Gaming hasn't gone with an abstract title here. It's a name designed to feel mechanical, fast and cash-driven, and that alone gives the slot a firmer personality than the average generic 5-reeler. Mechanically, what we can say with confidence is that Money Train 2 uses a 5-reel layout. That's still the market's most familiar format, and it keeps the structure readable for players who want something immediately legible rather than a left-field reel system. The standout feature from the supplied information is really its positioning within a named line: this is a sequel title with a strong brand stamp, which means its appeal is tied closely to recognisable series identity rather than novelty for novelty's sake. For volatility and session expectation, the safest read from the data is that this looks like a game players will approach because they already like the Money Train label, the Relax Gaming badge, or the feel of a sequel release in a known line. It reads more like a deliberate pick than a casual filler spin. If you're comparing it to anything supplied here, the obvious reference point is Money Train 3. That comparison frames Money Train 2 as part of a continuing series rather than a one-off release, which is useful for players who like to explore a slot line in order rather than jump in at the latest entry.

Money Train 3
Relax Gaming
Money Train 3 is Relax Gaming leaning hard into what it already does better than most studios: building a slot around pure feature pressure rather than scenery. This is a 5-reel game that trades on the reputation of the series straight away, so the identity is clear from the first spin. You're here for modifiers, persistent symbols and the sense that a round can suddenly turn into controlled chaos. The theme sticks with the outlaw-steampunk look that defines the Money Train line. You've got a dusty frontier setting pushed through brass, iron and smoke, with the usual mix of rail-yard grit and cartoon-engineered madness. It isn't trying to be subtle. The screen is busy, mechanical and slightly grimy, and that suits the game. Relax Gaming knows this territory by now, and the visuals feel built to keep the action readable when the feature grid starts filling with special symbols. Mechanically, Money Train 3 lives and dies by its bonus design. Base game spins mainly feel like the runway. The real personality comes from the feature setup, where collector-style behaviour, persistent modifiers and stacked special symbols can change the direction of a round very quickly. This is the kind of slot where individual features matter more than line play, and where players who enjoy tracking how symbols interact will get more out of it than those who just want simple spinning reels. It's dense, deliberate and built around escalation. In session terms, this sits firmly in the camp for players comfortable with volatility and dead air between meaningful moments. It can feel sparse for stretches, then suddenly become all about one feature sequence. That's the deal. You're not playing this for a smooth, even session; you're playing for sharp swings, mechanical twists and the possibility of a bonus round taking over the entire mood of the session. If you've played Money Train 2, you'll recognise the framework immediately, though Money Train 3 pushes even further into feature layering. The other useful comparison is Monopoly Megaways, but only in the sense that both games chase noisy, high-impact bonus energy. Money Train 3 is the more system-driven and less theatrical of the two.