Hippozino is a well established Progress Play casino with a great selection of slot games and promotions.
Launched back in the pre-mobile boom in 2012, Hippozino was one of the first ProgressPlay brands to shout about being accessible on all devices. The operator has always aimed to keep things fresh ever since coining its catchphrase of “Casino Anywhere” and 2023 saw the casino migrate to the newest version of the Progress lobby.
Even with the upgrade, the ownership hasn’t changed: the site is still powered by veteran white-label outfit ProgressPlay Ltd, licensed in Malta and by the UK Gambling Commission. A decade of continuous UKGC oversight is a pretty impressive trust signal in itself, and I found that the site has maintained a fairly positive reputation over the years.
Opening an account is a three-step form: name and date-of-birth; then address and mobile number; and finally a username/password page where you can toggle marketing emails. No SMS pin arrives during sign-up, but you will get the standard age-verification prompt if the automatic check fails.
The welcome bundle triggers automatically as long as your first top-up is £10+ and not from Skrill or Neteller. If you want to use PayviaPhone for that £10 deposit, you can – but the 15 % processing fee stings quite a bit.
In the Bingo section, you’ve got 12 Playtech bingo rooms available. Some are only open at certain times of day or once a week/month but the majority can be played in around the clock. At the quieter end of the lobby, you’ll find 90-ball games with fun variants like Fluffy Favourites and Deal or No Deal, with 1p to 5p ticket prices and about 100 players in at a time. At prime time, though, the networked weekly and monthly games attract thousands and push the prize pools into four and five-figure territory.
Progressives are surprisingly generous, as well, especially for a site that doesn’t specialise in bingo. While I was writing this review, Fluffy Favourites Bingo was sitting on a £8k rolling pot – very impressive, especially given the 5p tickets. Once you’re inside the games, chat hosts keep the banter moving, and tickets auto-dab – so you can spin a slot in a split-screen mini-game while the numbers roll.
There are about 1500 games at Hippozino, which isn’t the biggest library I’ve seen but it’s still quite impressive for an older casino that, once upon a time, only had one provider’s games on the site.
You’ll spot the big hitters immediately – Play’n GO’s Book of Dead series, Pragmatic’s entire Big Bass family, Microgaming classics like Immortal Romance, and the ever-present Rainbow Riches from Barcrest. But, if you dig a layer deeper, you’ll see games from more modern, experimental brands like Nolimit City’s xWays games including The Rave and Fire in the Hole, or ELK’s “Gravity” series of games like Cygnus where circular symbols cascade down the screen.
There’s a top slider that has a few filters like New, Featured, Jackpots, Casual and Vegas. They’re not the most comprehensive filters but they take you where you need to go. It’s particularly useful that the operators keep the New tab updated almost daily with new games while regularly swapping out the Featured titles for games that are trending among players. So, while it’s not the best site for exploring on your own using filters, the site does a good job of pointing you in the direction of games that are worth playing.
Most progressives here are Eyecon “must-drop” pots – a choice that keeps ticket prices low but means there’s no live counter on the thumbnails. Playtech’s Age of the Gods and Fire Blaze suites up the ceiling into six-figure territory, but remember that these are games that very rarely pay out their top pots.
There are no live dealer games here but you have plenty of RNG titles to choose from. Hippozino carries around twenty variants each of blackjack and roulette and another seventy-odd card and dice titles.
I found that Hippozino’s promotional calendar tends to simple reload bonuses – ranging from 50% to 75%. It’s not the most generous selection but there are always at least two or three going in a week so it’s nice that you always have the option for a boost.
All slot bonuses carry a chunky 50 × wagering requirement and a 3 × max-cash-out, so they suit small-stake turnover rather than high-roller cash-outs—but at least the rules are crystal clear.
Under the hood sits a gamified Rewards Store. Playing, triggering slot features or testing new games completes “missions” and earns points you can swap for mini-bonuses, cashback chips or extra spins. I always appreciate when casinos go for this approach to a loyalty program rather than the typical “earn comp points, cash in comp points” system; it makes things a lot more fun and interesting.
When it comes to banking, all of the deposit options have a £10 minimum (except for Neosurf, which is £15). It’s all very straightforward and, if you want to claim a bonus, the CODE field is very prominently displayed when funding your account. You can use debit cards, PayPal, PayviaPhone, Pay by Bank, PaysafeCard, Skrill, Neosurf, PayZ and Neteller.
Withdrawals are also similarly simple but I have to note that there’s a 1 % processing fee on every cash-out, capped at £3. “No fees” tends to be the motto of most online casinos nowadays so it’s a little bit disappointing that Hippozino charges for withdrawals.
In terms of timelines, ProgressPlay imposes a single-day internal review, so even e-wallets are “next working day” rather than instant. Debit cards are quoted at 3 to 7 days but I’ve received payouts within 48 hours.
The site is also quite committed to responsible gambling, which is always nice to see. You can easily set deposit, wager and loss limits from My Account, and you can set a Timeout period for up to 42 days. Reality Check reminders are defaulted to 60 minutes but you can change that to make it shorter.
Support runs 24/7 via live chat using the help centre. You begin with a chatbot who provides AI-powered answers but, if you need more assistance you’ll be connected with an agent within a few seconds. I preferred using the chat because it basically acts like a help centre until it hits a wall; the actual FAQ is pretty barebones anyways.
Hippozino isn’t the flashiest ProgressPlay skin, but it’s got a lot going for it in terms of practicality. It has a diverse spread of studios, a fun bingo lobby with lots of variants and impressive jackpot prizes, and a great range of bonuses.
I’d say that the biggest selling point, though is the Rewards Store. Turning everyday spins into points you can spend on the perks you actually want, rather than climbing a cookie-cutter VIP ladder, feels refreshingly 2025.
Of course, there are some drawbacks. The withdrawal fees are not a nice surprise and it doesn’t have the best filter options for its large game library. Still, this is a site that offers all of the important things that slot and bingo fans want out of a casino; so, I’d recommend checking it out.
50x bonus on slots, some games excluded and cash play is not counted. Table games count at 10% and video poker at 5%
“Play Responsibly” page is supplied by the Progress Play network and linked from the footer. It contains a brief description of the available tools plus the usual advice and useful external links. To use the limits, time out, reality check and self exclusion tools you have to go to the Responsible Gaming section in account settings. Limits are not confined to deposit limits – you can also set wagering, loss and time limits on your play.