A giant wheel spins inside a Bucharest studio dressed head to toe in candy pink, and off to one side a plinko wall waits for its turn. Sweet Bonanza CandyLand answers a question nobody in live casino had really asked before Pragmatic Play tried it: what happens when you take one of the biggest slots on the market and hand it a wheel, a host, and a live studio audience? The result sits somewhere between a money wheel and a slot machine, built almost entirely from one hit game’s DNA.
That lineage shows in how the game actually plays. Six bet spots sit on the wheel, four of them numbers pulled straight from a standard money wheel format, the other two lifted directly from the Sweet Bonanza slot itself. Land on Sweet Spins and you’re not watching a generic bonus round. You’re watching an actual tumbling-reel slot session play out live, complete with the same multiplier mechanics that made the original game a hit.
We are here to break down how the wheel is actually built, what each bonus game does mechanically, where the real odds sit, and which bets are worth your bankroll and which ones exist purely for the spectacle. It’s one of several live game shows we cover in depth, and we’ll also get into the Bucharest studio, the game’s history since its 2021 launch, and how it stacks up against the Evolution titles it was built to compete with.


Quick Answer
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand is Pragmatic Play's live game show built on a 54-segment wheel, combining money wheel mechanics with bonus rounds pulled directly from the Sweet Bonanza slot, with a max win of 20,000x capped at €500,000.
Strip away the candy set dressing and Sweet Bonanza CandyLand is a 54-segment money wheel wearing a slot machine’s bonus features. A live host spins the wheel every round, and you bet on where it stops before the spin starts. That much is standard money wheel territory.
What isn’t standard is what happens when the wheel lands somewhere interesting. Six spots on that wheel take direct bets: four numbers (1, 2, 5, and 10, each paying out at that number’s odds) plus two of the game’s three bonus features, Candy Drop and Sweet Spins. Land on Sweet Spins specifically and the game doesn’t improvise a generic bonus round. It drops you into an actual tumbling-reel slot session built on the same mechanics as the Sweet Bonanza slot itself, multipliers and all.
Two more segment types round out the wheel, and neither one takes a direct bet. Bubble Surprise resolves automatically for whoever’s already got a live bet down, handing out an instant multiplier or routing you into Candy Drop or Sweet Spins on the spot. Sugar Bomb works differently again, boosting whatever’s already riding on the table rather than starting anything new.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Provider | Pragmatic Play |
| Launched | November 24, 2021 |
| Wheel segments | 54 |
| Direct bet spots | 6 (Numbers 1, 2, 5, 10, plus Candy Drop and Sweet Spins) |
| Non-bettable segments | Bubble Surprise, Sugar Bomb |
| Max multiplier | Up to 20,000x, capped at €500,000 per bet |
| RTP | Up to 96.48%, varies by segment |
| Studio | Bucharest, Romania |
That’s the shape of the game before anything actually happens. The rest of this guide gets into exactly how each piece works, starting with where it all came from.
Sweet Bonanza launched as a slot in June 2019, and it became one of Pragmatic Play’s most recognizable titles almost immediately. Bright candy visuals, a Pay Anywhere payout structure, and a genuinely huge win ceiling gave it staying power most slots never get close to. Two years later, Pragmatic Play decided that popularity deserved a second format entirely.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand launched on November 24, 2021, broadcasting from a studio built specifically for the game in Bucharest, Romania. Pragmatic Play didn’t retrofit an existing set. The whole space was designed around the candy theme from the ground up, mixing physical studio elements with 3D virtual effects layered on top.
Yossi Barzely, Pragmatic Play’s Chief Business Development Officer at the time, described the release as the company’s answer to a specific gap in its lineup. Live Casino and Slots had never really converged this directly before, with a live game built almost entirely from an existing slot’s own mechanics rather than borrowing just the theme.
The comparison to Evolution’s Crazy Time wasn’t incidental. Sweet Bonanza CandyLand marked Pragmatic Play’s first real attempt at an entertainment-style live game show, a category Evolution had built out largely on its own since Dream Catcher’s 2017 launch. Rather than copy the format directly, Pragmatic Play leaned into what made its own slot catalogue distinctive, building Sweet Spins as a live version of an actual slot session rather than inventing a new mini-game from nothing.
That choice gave the game a built-in audience. Players who already knew Sweet Bonanza’s tumbling reels and multiplier mechanics could sit down at CandyLand and recognize half of what was happening immediately, something no wheel-based competitor could offer at launch.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand has stayed in Pragmatic Play’s live lineup ever since, streaming 24/7 from the Bucharest studio alongside the rest of the provider’s live casino catalogue. It remains one of the clearest examples of a slot developer building a live game around its own IP rather than chasing a competitor’s format outright.
The mechanics take about a minute to learn, but a few details separate a player who understands what's actually happening from one just watching the colors move. Here's the full sequence, start to finish.





Place chips on any combination of Number 1, Number 2, Number 5, Number 10, Candy Drop, or Sweet Spins. You can bet on more than one at once, and most players spread a small stake across a couple of numbers plus at least one bonus spot. You can also activate the Sugar Bomb Booster before betting closes, which adds 25% to your total stake in exchange for a bigger multiplier ceiling if Sugar Bomb lands later in the round.





You get roughly 13 seconds to finalize your bets before the window shuts. That’s tighter than most live table games, so it’s worth deciding your spread before the timer starts rather than scrambling mid-countdown.





The host spins the wheel by hand, alternating direction each round the same way other Pragmatic Play and Evolution money wheels do. There’s no digital simulation involved here. What you’re watching is a genuine physical spin.





If it lands on a number you backed, you’re paid instantly at that number’s odds. A bet on 5 pays 5 to 1, for example, with your original stake returned on top.





Sugar Bomb isn’t a direct bet spot. When the wheel lands there, every currently active bet on the table gets a random multiplier between 2x and 10x attached, and the host immediately respins the wheel with that multiplier riding on top of whatever bets are still live. If you activated the Sugar Bomb Booster earlier, that multiplier range doubles.





Bubble Surprise resolves automatically for anyone with an active bet, no separate wager required. It either pays out an instant multiplier on the spot or routes qualifying bets straight into Candy Drop or Sweet Spins.





Everyone else watches the round unfold without collecting anything, the same rule that governs bonus rounds on Crazy Time and Monopoly Live. Candy Drop and Sweet Spins each resolve on their own dedicated screen, and we’ll walk through exactly how both work in the next section.





A standard number round resolves in well under a minute. Bonus rounds run longer depending on which one triggers, since Sweet Spins in particular plays out a full slot session rather than a single instant reveal.
Say you bet €10 on Number 2 and €5 on Sweet Spins. The wheel lands on Sugar Bomb first. Since you have active bets on the table, both get a random multiplier attached, in this case 4x. The host respins, and the wheel lands on Number 2. Instead of the standard 2:1 payout, you collect 2x the Sugar Bomb multiplier. Your €10 bet returns €80 instead of €20, and your Sweet Spins bet stays live for the next actual spin since it didn’t hit this round.
A quick note worth flagging early: Sugar Bomb and Bubble Surprise reward players who already have money on the table, not players who bet specifically on those segments, since neither one takes a direct wager. Betting on the four numbers and the two direct bonus spots is the only way to guarantee you’re covered when either one lands.
Every Sweet Bonanza CandyLand round comes down to a fixed split across 54 wheel segments. Numbers dominate by design, the same way they do on Crazy Time and Monopoly Live, and the bonus segments are rare on purpose.
| Segment | Count on Wheel | Probability | Direct Bet? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Numbers (1, 2, 5, 10 combined) | 45 | 83.33% | Yes |
| Sugar Bomb | 3 | 5.56% | No |
| Bubble Surprise | 3 | 5.56% | No |
| Candy Drop | 2 | 3.70% | Yes |
| Sweet Spins | 1 | 1.85% | Yes |
A few things worth pulling out of that table. The four numbered bet spots share 45 of the 54 segments between them, and Number 1 carries by far the biggest slice of that share. Frequency drops as the payout climbs, the same trade-off you’d find on any money wheel: Number 1 hits the most often and pays the least, Number 10 hits rarely and pays the most, with 2 and 5 sitting in between.
That’s a deliberate design pattern rather than a quirk specific to this game, and it holds true across Crazy Time, Monopoly Live, and Dream Catcher too. What matters for your bankroll is the shape of it, not the exact count behind each number, since Pragmatic Play hasn’t published a granular per-number breakdown the way some competitors have for their own wheels.
The nine bonus segments split unevenly across four different features. Sugar Bomb and Bubble Surprise each take three segments, giving them the best odds of the four at 5.56% apiece, roughly once every 18 spins. Candy Drop follows at 3.70%, landing closer to once every 27 spins. Sweet Spins sits alone on a single segment, the rarest outcome on the entire wheel at 1.85%, or roughly once every 54 spins.
That rarity is exactly why Sweet Spins carries the game’s biggest headline numbers. It’s the bonus built most directly around the original slot’s mechanics, and it’s also the one you’ll wait longest to see.
Landing on a number pays instantly. Landing on one of the three bonus features sends you somewhere else entirely, and each one plays by its own rules. Here’s exactly what happens once the wheel sends you through.
Candy Drop takes the studio’s giant plinko-style wall and turns it into a pick-your-candy game. You choose one of three candy balls, red, blue, or yellow, and the presenter releases it into the maze. From there it’s out of anyone’s hands. The ball bounces its way down the wall, collecting random multipliers as it passes through the maze structure.
The wall isn’t purely random luck dressed up as choice. Four Jackpot Boxes sit inside the maze, and if your chosen candy ball happens to pass through all four on its way down, you land the bonus’s maximum 1,000x win. Landing fewer of the four still pays out based on whatever multipliers your ball collected along the way, just at a smaller scale.
It’s the only one of the three bonus games where you make an actual decision (which candy to pick), even though the ball’s path once released is entirely down to the maze mechanics. That small sliver of interactivity is part of what separates Candy Drop from a pure watch-and-wait bonus round.
Sweet Spins is the bonus that makes Sweet Bonanza CandyLand genuinely different from every wheel-based competitor on the market. Landing here doesn’t launch a mini-game built for the wheel format. It drops you straight into a live 6×5 grid version of the actual Sweet Bonanza slot, running the same core mechanics that made the original game a hit.
You get 10 free spins to start. Wins land once eight or more matching symbols appear anywhere on the grid, no paylines required, the same Pay Anywhere structure the slot built its reputation on. Multipliers ranging from 2x to 100x can land on individual symbols during the feature, and when they do, their values stack together and apply once the tumbling sequence finishes resolving.
Land three or more Lollipop scatter symbols during the feature and you’ll pick up five additional spins on top of whatever’s left in your session. That retrigger mechanic means a strong Sweet Spins round can run considerably longer than its 10-spin starting point, and it’s the single biggest reason this bonus produces the game’s largest documented wins.
Bubble Surprise works differently from the other two, since it doesn’t take a direct wager at all. When the wheel lands here, every player with an active bet on the table watches a single vertical reel spin to a stop. That reel lands on one of a small set of outcomes: an instant multiplier win of 5x, 10x, or 25x, or a redirect straight into either Candy Drop or Sweet Spins.
That second possibility is what makes Bubble Surprise worth paying attention to even though you can’t bet on it directly. A player who backed Candy Drop or Sweet Spins can end up triggering that bonus through a Bubble Surprise redirect just as easily as through the wheel landing on that segment outright, effectively giving those two bet spots a second path into their own bonus round.
| Bonus Game | Format | Direct Bet? | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sugar Bomb | Automatic multiplier + respin | No | 5.56% (~every 18 spins) |
| Bubble Surprise | Vertical reel, multiplier or redirect | No | 5.56% (~every 18 spins) |
| Candy Drop | Plinko-style maze, pick your candy | Yes | 3.70% (~every 27 spins) |
| Sweet Spins | Live 6×5 slot session | Yes | 1.85% (~every 54 spins) |
Every Sweet Bonanza CandyLand round carries the possibility of a second event stacking on top of the first, and that’s exactly what Sugar Bomb does. It’s not a bonus game in the way Candy Drop or Sweet Spins are. There’s no separate screen, no mini-game, no decision to make. It’s a multiplier mechanic that boosts whatever’s already sitting on the table.
When the wheel stops on one of the three Sugar Bomb segments, a random multiplier between 2x and 10x gets assigned automatically. Every bet still active on the table, whether that’s a number, Candy Drop, or Sweet Spins, gets that multiplier attached. The host then respins the wheel immediately, with the original bets still in place and the Sugar Bomb multiplier riding along for whatever segment comes up next.
That second spin resolves like any other round. If it lands on a number you backed, your payout gets multiplied by the Sugar Bomb value on top of that number’s standard odds. If it lands on Candy Drop or Sweet Spins, the entire bonus round result gets multiplied once that round finishes playing out.
Before betting closes, you can activate the Sugar Bomb Booster for an extra 25% added to your total stake. If Sugar Bomb then lands during that round, the multiplier range doubles, pushing the ceiling from 10x up to 20x. It’s a straightforward trade: pay more upfront for a chance at a bigger multiplier if the feature actually triggers, with no effect on anything if it doesn’t.
Say you bet €10 on Number 5 and don’t activate the Booster. The wheel lands on Sugar Bomb, and the random multiplier comes up 6x. The host respins with your €10 still riding on Number 5 and that 6x multiplier attached. The wheel lands on 5. Instead of the standard 5:1 payout, you collect 5x the Sugar Bomb multiplier. Your €10 bet returns €300 instead of the €50 you’d have gotten on a normal hit.
If the respin lands on Sugar Bomb again rather than resolving normally, the process repeats. A fresh multiplier gets assigned and multiplied against whatever value is already attached, and the wheel spins once more. This can chain more than once in a single sequence before a non-Sugar Bomb segment finally lands, which is part of how a modest opening bet can compound into one of the game’s larger documented wins.
A couple of things worth clearing up, since misconceptions travel fast in live casino chat:


Sweet Bonanza CandyLand carries no skill component. The wheel doesn’t respond to timing, and no betting pattern changes what segment comes up next. Sugar Bomb and Bubble Surprise can’t be bet on directly, so unlike Crazy Time’s Top Slot, there’s no way to actively chase a multiplier feature either. What you can control is how you spread your bankroll across the four numbers and two direct bonus spots, and that choice shapes the rhythm of your session even though it can’t touch the underlying math working against you.
Putting your full stake on Number 1 is the lowest-variance approach the game offers. It’s the most frequent segment on the wheel by a wide margin, so you’re collecting small, steady payouts on a large share of spins. The tradeoff is obvious: you’ll rarely see a bonus round unfold, since you haven’t put anything on Candy Drop or Sweet Spins to begin with.
Spreading a stake across all four numbers means you’re covering the 45 segments that make up the bulk of the wheel. You’ll win on most spins this way, since numbers occupy over 83% of the wheel’s total segments. Payouts stay modest across the board, and you’re still sitting out every bonus round unless you add a separate bet elsewhere.
This flips the approach entirely, putting stakes on Candy Drop and Sweet Spins instead of the numbers. It’s the highest-variance play available, since those two segments combined occupy just three of the wheel’s 54 positions. You’ll lose the vast majority of spins outright. But land Sweet Spins in particular, especially with a Lollipop retrigger extending the session, and the payout can dwarf anything a number bet produces.
Most regular players settle somewhere between the two extremes: a heavier stake on Number 1 for steady returns, paired with a smaller bet on Candy Drop or Sweet Spins to stay in the game if a bonus round lands. This smooths out the dry stretches between bonus hits without demanding a huge bankroll, while keeping the door open for a larger multiplier when the wheel cooperates.
Since Sugar Bomb isn’t a direct bet, the Booster is the only way to actively influence how big its multiplier can get, and it costs 25% of your total stake regardless of whether Sugar Bomb ends up landing that round. Whether that’s worth paying comes down to how you value the tradeoff: a real shot at doubling the multiplier ceiling against a guaranteed extra cost on every single spin, hit or not.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand’s overall RTP runs anywhere from 91.15% up to 96.48%, and where you land in that range depends entirely on your bet mix. That’s a wider spread than you’ll see on most table games, and it comes down to the same trade-off driving every choice on this page: the segments that hit constantly pay the least, and the ones you’ll wait an hour for can pay life-changing multiples of your stake.
Chasing the tightest possible edge means leaning hard on Number 1 and accepting the small, steady payouts that come with it. Chasing the biggest number means betting Sweet Spins and accepting that you’ll watch a lot of rounds resolve without you. Neither approach is wrong. The point is knowing which end of that 91-96% range your own betting habits are actually landing you in, rather than assuming the headline RTP applies no matter how you play.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand streams from a purpose-built studio in Bucharest, Romania, one of Pragmatic Play’s key live casino production hubs. Unlike some live games that get slotted into a shared, reusable set, this studio was designed specifically around the candy theme from the ground up. The result leans hard into pink, purple, and gold, with physical set pieces mixed alongside 3D virtual effects layered on top through augmented reality.
That combination shows up most clearly in how the wheel itself is presented. Dynamic lighting and animations shift depending on what’s happening in the round, brightening or changing color around key moments like a Sugar Bomb hit or a Candy Drop trigger. It’s a noticeably different visual approach from the more traditional casino-floor look most live tables go for.
The studio layout puts the Sweet Bonanza wheel at the center, with three separate areas built around it for the game’s bonus features. The plinko-style wall used for Candy Drop, the screen setup for Sweet Spins, and the space handling Bubble Surprise all sit as distinct zones rather than sharing a single generic bonus screen, giving each feature its own visual identity when the camera cuts to it.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand streams 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the same always-available model most major live game shows run on. Low-latency streaming keeps the pace tight, and the 13-second betting window depends on that responsiveness holding up consistently across however many players are watching at once.
Pragmatic Play built this game specifically to compete in the entertainment-style live game show category Evolution had largely built on its own. A dedicated, theme-specific studio was part of making that case convincingly rather than launching a wheel game that looked interchangeable with anything else already on the market. The Bucharest studio remains the sole broadcast location for Sweet Bonanza CandyLand, unlike some Evolution titles that run parallel versions from multiple cities.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand translates to mobile cleanly, and the game’s own design work is a big part of why. Pragmatic Play built it on HTML5 from the start, meaning there’s no separate app to download and no stripped-down version waiting on smaller screens. What loads on desktop is what loads on your phone, just resized to fit.
The wheel spin, the host’s commentary, and all three bonus features render identically on mobile browsers. That matters more here than it does for some live games, since Sweet Spins in particular is running an actual 6×5 slot grid rather than a simple wheel animation, and that grid needs to stay legible on a smaller screen without losing the detail that makes tumbling wins and stacking multipliers easy to follow.
A few practical shifts happen once you’re playing on a phone instead of a desktop:
Beyond that, there’s no real compromise. Whether you’re catching a quick number bet on a break or watching a full Sweet Spins sequence play out on your commute, the mobile version delivers the same game, just smaller.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand moves fast, and its candy-bright presentation is built to keep you engaged round after round. The 13-second betting window, the constant possibility of a Sugar Bomb stacking on your next spin, and the visual spectacle of Sweet Spins all work together to pull you into longer sessions than you might have planned. That’s part of the design, so it helps to set boundaries before the wheel starts spinning, not partway through one.
A few practical habits make a real difference:
If gambling stops feeling like entertainment and starts feeling like something you can’t control, support is available. Organizations like GamCare and the National Council on Problem Gambling offer confidential help, and most licensed casinos provide self-exclusion tools directly through your account settings.
Sweet Bonanza CandyLand earned its spot in live casino by doing something genuinely different rather than just copying the wheel format Evolution had already proven out. Building Sweet Spins as an actual slot session, complete with the original’s tumbling reels and stacking multipliers, gave Pragmatic Play a bonus round no wheel-based competitor could replicate without owning the underlying slot.
That originality doesn’t change the math sitting underneath it. This is still a game of chance, with an RTP that swings anywhere from 91.15% to 96.48% depending entirely on how you spread your bets. No amount of tracking past spins or waiting for a “due” Sweet Spins segment changes what happens next. What you can control is your stake, your spread across the six bet spots, and when you decide a session’s over.
That balance between genuine novelty and familiar math is really the appeal here. Sweet Bonanza CandyLand doesn’t pretend to be something it’s not. It gives you a wheel, a real slot session waiting inside one of its segments, and enough candy-colored spectacle to make even a quiet stretch of number bets worth sticking around for. Play it for what it is, and it delivers exactly that.
Related, but not identical. Sweet Spins specifically recreates the slot’s tumbling-reel mechanics live, complete with the 8+ symbol payout rule and Lollipop retrigger. The wheel itself, along with Sugar Bomb, Bubble Surprise, and Candy Drop, has no equivalent in the original slot. Think of it as the slot’s engine dropped into a money wheel format rather than a straight port.
It costs 25% of your total stake regardless of whether Sugar Bomb actually lands, and it only pays off by doubling that segment’s multiplier ceiling on the rounds where it does. Since Sugar Bomb hits roughly once every 18 spins, you’re paying that extra cost on a lot of rounds where it does nothing. Whether that trade is worth it comes down to your own risk tolerance rather than any clear mathematical edge either way.
No. Both resolve automatically for whoever already has an active bet on the table when the wheel lands there. The only way to guarantee you’re covered is to have money on one of the six direct bet spots (the four numbers, Candy Drop, or Sweet Spins) before either segment comes up.
Pragmatic Play has updated Sweet Bonanza CandyLand since its 2021 launch, including adding the Bubble Surprise feature, and not every third-party site has kept its numbers current. Independent sources also vary in how they report RTP, with figures ranging from roughly 91% up to 96.48% depending on bet type. Always check the in-game rules panel at your specific casino for the exact numbers being used on that table.
Both are wheel-based live game shows with multiple bonus rounds and a similar 20,000x ceiling, but they’re built from different starting points. Crazy Time layers four original bonus games onto a wheel built specifically for the format. Sweet Bonanza CandyLand centers its identity around Sweet Spins, a live version of an existing, already-popular slot. Which one suits you comes down to whether you’d rather chase Crazy Time’s dedicated bonus variety or the familiarity of an actual slot session playing out live.
Minimums typically start around $0.20 per spin, with maximums reaching up to $3,000 depending on the casino and table. Check your specific operator’s limits before sitting down, since these vary between platforms the same way they do on most live game shows.



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