APP COMRADE

LG / game / WILD WEST SLOT MACHINE

REVIEW

Wild West Slot Machine is a competent virtual-coin spinner with a thin theme.

Inlogic's saloon-skinned slots sim does the basics on webOS — five reels, a few bonus rounds, no real money — but the Wild West dressing is wallpaper-deep.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

LG

Wild West Slot Machine

INLOGIC SOFTWARE S.R.O.

OUR SCORE

6.6

LG

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

Wild West Slot Machine is exactly what it says on the saloon door. Five reels, a sprinkling of cowboy iconography, a free-spins bonus, a pick-a-badge bonus, and a coin balance that refills once a day. There’s no real money in play — the LG Content Store doesn’t allow it — so this is firmly in the virtual-coin time-killer category that Inlogic Software has built a small empire around across webOS, Tizen, and Android.

The Slovak studio knows how to ship these. The webOS build launches quickly, runs cleanly on older LG hardware, maps the bet and autospin controls sensibly to the Magic Remote, and stays out of its own way. What it doesn’t do is commit to the theme. The cowboy hats pay out like cherries; the wanted-poster Wild behaves like every other Wild in every other Inlogic slot; the bonus rounds are template work with a different skin pasted over them. The saloon doors open, the reels spin, and the cowboy hat never does anything the cherries didn’t already do.

For a casual spin on the couch this is fine. As a game with any reason to come back to it specifically — versus any of the dozen near-identical Inlogic slots one TV-Store row over — the case is thin.

The saloon doors open, the reels spin, and the cowboy hat never does anything the cherries didn't already do.

FEATURES

Wild West Slot Machine is a free virtual-coin slot simulator from Inlogic Software, a Slovak studio that ships dozens of themed casino games across LG webOS, Samsung Tizen, and Google Play. No real-money gambling — the LG Content Store doesn't permit it — so the entire economy runs on a top-up coin balance that refills on a daily timer.

The core loop is a standard five-reel, multi-line slot with Wild West skinning: cowboy hats, revolvers, sheriff stars, whiskey bottles, and the obligatory wanted-poster Wild symbol. Bet adjustment, autospin, and a max-bet shortcut sit on the Magic Remote. A scatter triggers a free-spins round; a pick-a-card bonus appears on three sheriff badges. Reel animations are stylised rather than 3D, which keeps the file size small and the response time on lower-end webOS hardware acceptable.

No accounts, no cloud save, no leaderboard. Coin balance lives locally on the TV — wipe the app and it resets. Audio is a loop of harmonica and saloon piano that you will mute within ten minutes.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The fundamentals are honest. Reels spin smoothly on the Magic Remote, the bonus rounds resolve quickly, and there's no aggressive monetisation pushing fake in-app currency packs at you — because there isn't a store. For a TV-side coin-spinner you fire up while half-watching something else, the friction is genuinely low.

Inlogic's webOS port is well-behaved. The app launches in a few seconds, the controls map cleanly to the directional pad as a fallback for older remotes, and there are no startup ads or video pre-rolls.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The Wild West theme is paint, not design. The cowboy symbols pay out exactly like the cherries-and-bars they replaced; the free-spins round is the same free-spins round Inlogic ships in their Egyptian, pirate, and fruit-themed slots. A genre that lives or dies on flavour gets the bare minimum here — no narrative bonus, no saloon mini-game, no progression beyond the coin counter.

The coin economy also has the structural problem every free TV-slots app has: once you grind through the daily top-up, the only thing to do is wait. There's no way to spend money to keep playing, which is the right ethical choice, but it also means a long session ends with a lockout rather than a payoff.

CONCLUSION

Reasonable as a five-minute filler on the couch, weaker as a game you'd return to. LG TV owners who like the slot-machine feedback loop and don't mind the daily coin cap will find it does the job; anyone hoping the Wild West dressing actually changes the play should look elsewhere. Worth a try because it's free and harmless, not because it stands out.