Chicken Road Race from iNOUT isn't a traditional slot—it's a progressive multiplier crash game with real racing mechanics. You control a cartoon chicken mascot wearing a red racing helmet as it navigates a five-lane highway viewed from above. Each lane you cross without getting smashed by an F1 car increases your multiplier, and you can cash out at any moment to lock in your winnings.
The game uses a traffic light system at the top of each lane. Red lights warn you that a car is approaching in that lane, while green lights signal it's safe to proceed. Cars appear as colourful F1 racers—blue, red-orange with gold helmets, and green with white stripes—all rendered in a vibrant cartoon style against the gray asphalt texture.
What sets this game apart is the difficulty-based risk/reward system. Choose your challenge level before each round, and the game adjusts both the number of lanes you'll need to cross and the multiplier progression:
The multiplier values appear in bright cyan displays below the traffic lights, updating as you progress. On Hardcore mode, you can reach a whopping 9.09x multiplier if you make it to the final lane—but one wrong move and you lose your bet.
The control panel at the bottom of the screen is dead simple: adjust your bet (0.01 to 200 dollars), select your difficulty with up/down arrows, and hit the massive green play button to start. You can enable a spacebar shortcut in the settings menu to advance through lanes quickly once you're confident.
Provably Fair technology ensures every round is transparent. The game generates results from a combination of server seed and the first three bets of each round, and you can verify the fairness of any bet from your history. It's all laid out in the settings menu with SHA256 hashes you can check yourself.
Released on 18 November 2025, Chicken Road Race delivers a 95.6% RTP with a max win potential of $20,000. It's a single-player experience designed for mobile-first gameplay, with responsive controls that work brilliantly on phones and tablets. The cartoon aesthetic keeps it light-hearted, but the crash-style mechanics demand real strategy—especially when you're deciding whether to cash out at 3x or push for that 9x glory.