This is our process for judging games and casinos, what drives our business, and what sets us apart from the other affiliate websites that pop up in your search results.
We write independent reviews of online casino games and the casinos that feature them. A game review looks at certified RTP information, the math and mechanics that drive the game, volatility levels, and real play. A casino review looks at licences, terms and conditions for all bonuses, testing of customer support quality, and analysis of real payment performance versus stated times.
Tower Rush by Galaxsys is one of many crash and turbo games in our review library – along with a wide range of slots, live dealer games, and table games covering many regions and jurisdictions. It is the same process for every title, regardless of type: study published specs, play in demo and real money modes, compare results against developer claims, and write up our findings with full disclosure.
We receive referral fees (affiliate commissions) when readers go to a recommended casino and sign up. One strict rule governs these arrangements: we never take such business from a casino that does not pass our review bar. That commission just isn't worth losing credibility over.
Every review, guide, and analysis you read here is written, edited, and fact-checked by a credited contributor. None of this content is created by ghost writers, outsourced agencies, or machine learning engines.
Contributors come from iGaming operations, casino product management, and specialist games media. All articles are attributed to their author.
Analysts writing these pages have an average of over 10 years of hands-on iGaming experience. They work directly with game providers, which gives them access to provider documentation outside of public-facing material.
Game reviews are updated whenever a game provider updates their published specs, or when an external certification body issues a different RTP range, or when a recommended casino stops accepting new registrations.
Licence statuses for all recommended casinos are checked against publicly available regulator databases quarterly. Any casino licence that is revoked, suspended, or demoted is removed immediately from recommendation lists.
Tower Rush coverage in this guide reflects the release of the product on February 28, 2024. At the time of writing, the certified RTP of 96.17-97% released by Gaming Laboratories International (GLI) and Gaming Associates is the latest Galaxsys specification.
The criteria below reflect the order we use them in based on what matters most to the average player, making an informed decision.
RTP data in our reviews are sourced from verified, certified game provider documentation. In Tower Rush, that range is 96.17-97%, verified by GLI and Gaming Associates. We also define volatility in practical terms for our readers, describing what high volatility really means in gameplay terms, instead of simply calling it high volatility.
Game reviews detail exactly how the game plays, not just how the game is described as playing. That means how we talk about Tower Rush is specific – the Provably Fair algorithm commits the outcome at the round's start, each bonus floor activates as it does, and what it means to cash out manually.
Maximum wins are put into context, not presented as a selling point. Tower Rush has a 100x maximum win – $10,000 max at $100 stake – which is lower than that of many other crash games, and getting it requires certain circumstances.
HTML5 or native? Mobile or desktop? We write the technical delivery, not the hype. Tower Rush: HTML5, playable on any device in any current browser, no app or download, portrait-mode for mobile play.
Details on the features are explained as a decision, not a list. For Tower Rush, for example, what Frozen Floor does, and doesn't, do; that the Temple Floor multiplies, it doesn't add; when the Triple Build works best. The details are the point.
Casino evaluations use distinct metrics, completely separate from the ones used to score games. In other words, we're evaluating the platform itself, not the software it's offering.
For a casino to qualify, it must have a valid licence from either the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA), the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC), the Gibraltar Regulatory Authority, or some other high-standard HGC licence. We accept Curaçao master licences with clear warnings about how much player protection they offer. Curaçao sub-licences are never part of our recommended list.
We read the full bonus terms and conditions – not just the bonus amount on offer. We look at the real value a bonus offers based on its wagering requirement, expiry time, which games the player is allowed to use it on, and what a crash game contributes in terms of that wagering. We know a $500 bonus at 50x wagering over 24 hours isn't as practical as a $100 bonus at 25x wagering for 30 days. We do the math and present both.
We verify stated payment times with the experience of other players, on at least two third-party casino review sites. We're looking for signs of a wider problem – not a few isolated incidents – in withdrawal processing times, excessive document requests, and account freezes. This is disqualifying, no matter what licence a casino has.
We check that a casino offers a real game from Galaxsys – the provider name and their certifications are shown in the game info panel – not just the tile in the lobby. We also look at the rest of the catalogue to see if a casino uses a range of quality providers, not just a selection of low-standard game studios or old game titles, since this reveals what the casino thinks about the overall player experience.
We contact customer support before writing a casino review. A casino won't appear on our recommended list if a real player has to wait 20 minutes to reach a live agent, however great that casino's landing page promises. The test is real communication, not the claim of live availability.
We state shortcomings. Tower Rush caps its top payout at 100x – a limit that is lower than certain similar crash games – lacks an auto cash-out option, and is characterized as high volatility, which is to say the game is more likely to go for an extended spell without a significant win. These are facts about Tower Rush that we mention in the review, regardless of whether we have a commission arrangement with the operator we are discussing.
Ratings reflect actual quality. A rating of three out of five indicates a substandard product. A perfect rating reflects a product that is, in our opinion, well worth the price of admission. Neither figure is ever adjusted to preserve commercial relationships with operators.
Commercial affiliations are disclosed. If we make a commission by directing players to a casino, that is stated on the relevant page. The nature of that relationship does not change the content of a review, nor its rating or its inclusion in our rankings.
We maintain reviews, we do not archive them. Wherever material facts change – RTP, licence status, changes in behaviour from operator – we maintain a record of that change in the review. Reviews display the date they were last reviewed, so that any review that has not been maintained since 2024 clearly so indicates.
No paid-for placements. Casino operators cannot pay for a casino to be listed above others in a comparison page or recommendation.
No fabricated scarcity. We do not use countdown clocks, nor do we describe bonus terms as being subject to time limits or other arbitrary restrictions, except where those claims relate directly to the bonus terms themselves.
No decontextualised ratings. We do not publish reviews with ratings that are not accompanied by disclosure that the data they are based on is drawn from a single or otherwise limited sample.
If you believe there has been an error in fact or methodology, or you would like to discuss our policies further, we encourage you to contact us using the form below. We make a point to respond to all inquiries within 48 hours of receipt.
We provide responsible gambling information on every game review we publish. We do not write content that is designed to discourage gambling or to promote gambling beyond a level that is affordable for a player.
We do not use terms like “guaranteed wins,” “beating the casino,” or “proven tactics”. These things do not exist, at least not in casino games that are played through licensed casinos. Tower Rush, like any other game, includes a house edge. The 96.17–97% RTP is a figure that indicates the game returns approximately 96 to 97% to the player over the long term. This figure should be the starting point for any discussion around how Tower Rush or other casino games should be played, not an end point that is discussed in footnotes.
Tower Rush, like every casino game, has a built-in house edge. The 96.12%–97% RTP means the casino keeps 3–4 cents of every dollar wagered over the long run. Players should know this before a session begins.
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