Swintt has unveiled its latest SwinttPremium title, Duolito Iceman Tower, taking players on a sun-drenched trip to the Italian city of Pisa.
The five-reel, 10-payline slot blends Italian holiday charm with frozen dessert imagery, populating its reels with gelato treats and classic ace-through-ten playing card symbols.
The game’s titular iceman serves as the highest-value symbol, capable of awarding a top prize worth 10,000 times the player’s selected bet.
A standout mechanic in the base game is the leaning tower wild symbol, which shifts one column to the left on every spin until it disappears off the screen.
These moving wilds substitute for all regular symbols as they travel across the reels, adding sustained win potential across multiple consecutive turns.
The free spins feature activates when players land three or more scatter symbols anywhere on the reels, with 10, 15, or 20 free spins awarded depending on how many scatters triggered the round.
During the bonus, a collection mechanic kicks in where every four scatter symbols gathered will upgrade the wild symbol, first expanding it to cover two spaces, then three, and eventually the full reel.
Any payline completed using a wild symbol also adds a free spin to the player’s total, while landing three, four, or five scatters simultaneously awards a full fresh allocation of free spins.
Players can also take their winnings into an optional Risk feature, where correctly guessing the colour of a hidden playing card doubles the prize on offer.
Anthony Dalla-Giacoma, chief commercial officer at Swintt, said: “The sun is out and the iceman is back in action in Duolito Iceman Tower – the latest thrilling release in our SwinttPremium collection.”
Dalla-Giacoma added: “With shifting wilds, a rewarding free spins feature and an upgrade mechanic that gives every scatter the potential to make the bonus even bigger, the game delivers simple, accessible gameplay with real staying power.”
He concluded: “We’re confident it will prove a popular summer release with our operator partners and their players.”

