Claim A$10,000 + 250 FS at RainbetPlay now

Fish Shooting Games at Rainbet

Updated on July 2, 2026 by the editorial team

Fish shooting games at Rainbet trade spinning reels for a live arcade cannon. You aim, you fire, and every fish you sink pays out at a fixed multiple of your shot cost. Australian players who find slots too passive tend to gravitate here, because the outcome tracks your aim and your timing rather than a single autospin. This page covers what these titles actually are, how to load one for real cash, which games draw the biggest crowds, and what the bet ranges and return figures look like once you sit down.

The same Rainbet account and wallet you use for slots and live tables covers the fish arcade too. No separate deposit, no separate login.

Live Blackjack
Evolution
Crazy Coin Flip
Evolution
Sweet Bonanza
Pragmatic Play RTP 96.51%
Dream Catcher
Evolution

What you are actually shooting at

Fish shooting games come from the Asian arcade tradition, and they behave nothing like a reel game. The screen is an underwater scene. Fish of different sizes drift across it, each one tagged with a payout multiplier printed on its body. A small guppy might carry 2x. A giant golden dragon-fish can carry 300x or more.

You control a cannon at the bottom edge. Every shot costs a set amount of your balance. Land enough hits to kill a fish and the game pays your shot cost multiplied by that fish's tag. Miss, or fail to finish it before it swims off-screen, and those bullets are gone.

Here is the part newcomers underestimate: bigger fish soak up more bullets before they die. A 300x boss might need forty or fifty hits, and another shooter at the same table can steal the kill from you. So the printed multiplier is a ceiling, not a promise. Skilled players read fish patterns, save their heavy cannon for wounded targets, and avoid dumping ammo into a shark someone else is about to finish. Reels reward patience. Fish games reward attention.

Most tables at Rainbet run in multiplayer mode, which means you share the water with other shooters in real time. The pace is quick and the screen is busy. If that sounds like a lot, single-player versions exist too, and they let you learn the rhythm before you join a crowded table.

Load a table and fire your first shot for real money

  1. Fund the account. Deposits at Rainbet start at A$20, and you can pay by crypto, card or e-wallet. That balance covers fish games with no separate top-up.
  2. Open the games catalogue. Find the fish or arcade category in the games lobby, or type "fish" into the search bar to pull every shooter at once.
  3. Pick a table by its shot cost. Each title shows a bet-per-shot range. Start at the floor of that range so you learn the controls without burning your balance.
  4. Set your cannon level. Most games let you scale bullet power up or down. Higher power costs more per shot but kills big fish faster. Begin low.
  5. Aim and hold to fire. Click or tap a fish to shoot at it; hold to keep firing. Watch how many hits each species takes before it drops.

One habit saves beginners real money: set a session budget before you touch the cannon. Fish games fire fast, and a held trigger drains a balance quicker than any slot spin. Decide what you are willing to lose, and stop when you hit it. Your winnings land back in the same wallet, and withdrawals start at A$30 once you clear Rainbet's verification.

The shooters players come back to

Rainbet's arcade shelf pulls from studios that specialise in this format. The table below lists the titles that see the most traffic, with the kind of top multiplier and shot range you can expect. Exact figures shift by table, so treat these as a guide rather than a fixed quote.

GameStudioTop fish multiplierShot range
Fishin' ReelsPragmatic Playup to 1,000xA$0.10 - A$40
Fish CatchBGamingup to 300xA$0.09 - A$18
Ocean King style tablesThird-party arcadeup to 500xA$0.10 - A$25
Fishin' Frenzy variantsBig Time Gamingup to 2,000xA$0.10 - A$50
Deep-sea multiplayer roomsThird-party arcadeup to 800xA$0.05 - A$20

Two of these blur the line between a shooter and a slot. Fishin' Reels and the Fishin' Frenzy family use a fishing theme with grid or reel mechanics rather than a live cannon, so they play closer to a bonus-buy slot. The true arcade shooters are the Ocean King and deep-sea multiplayer rooms, where you actually aim. Read the game description before you buy in, because the two styles pay out in very different ways.

Reading the return figures and picking your shot size

Return to player on a fish game works differently from a slot. A slot posts one RTP figure for the whole title. A shooter's return depends on the cannon level you choose and how efficiently you spend bullets. Published RTP on these titles usually lands between 92% and 97%, but a careless player who empties heavy shots into fish that swim away will see a real return far below that ceiling.

Shot size is where you control your exposure. At the A$0.05 floor of a penny table, a bad run costs you cents. Crank the cannon to A$40 or A$50 per shot and the swings turn brutal fast, because you can fire several shots a second. A useful rule: never set a per-shot cost higher than 1% of your session budget. That keeps you in the water long enough to actually learn a table.

Whether fish game winnings count toward the welcome offer is a separate question worth checking. The Rainbet welcome package runs to A$10,000 + 250 FS, and it carries a x40 wagering requirement over 30 days. Arcade and shooter titles often contribute less toward wagering than slots do, or are excluded, so read the bonus terms before you assume a shooter clears your balance. If you want a clean shot at the offer, slots are the safer wagering vehicle.

Rainbet holds a licence from the Anjouan Gaming Authority, and every fish table runs on a certified random engine, so which fish takes the fatal hit is not something the room decides for you. Support sits on live chat and email around the clock if a round glitches or a payout looks off.

Questions Rainbet players ask about fish games

Are fish shooting games based on skill or luck?

Both. Which fish appear and when is random, but your aim, your cannon level and your timing decide how much of that value you actually collect. A shooter who targets wounded fish and avoids wasting bullets will outperform one who fires blindly, even at the same table.

How much does it cost to play?

Each shot costs a set amount, and ranges run from about A$0.05 up to A$50 depending on the table and your cannon level. Deposits at Rainbet start at A$20, so a modest top-up gives you plenty of ammunition at the penny rooms.

Can I play against other people?

Yes. Most tables run in multiplayer mode where several shooters share the same water in real time. You compete for the same fish, so finishing a big target before someone else does becomes part of the game. Single-player versions are available if you prefer to practise alone.

Do fish game wins count toward the welcome bonus?

Not always. The A$10,000 + 250 FS welcome package carries a x40 wagering requirement across 30 days, and arcade titles often contribute less than slots toward that total, or nothing at all. Check the bonus terms for the exact game weighting before you rely on a shooter to clear it.

How do I withdraw what I win?

Winnings drop straight back into your main Rainbet wallet. The minimum cash-out is A$30, and once your account passes verification, crypto and e-wallet payouts land within 24 hours after review. Card and bank withdrawals take a little longer.

Paul Carter
Reviewed byPaul CarterCasino & bonus analyst

Rainbet — Fish games

Welcome package

Play now See the full Rainbet review →