How InOut now presents its “chicken” family in 2026
On the official InOut Games site in 2026, the pattern is hard to miss. At the top of the portfolio they highlight a group of fast titles with clear RTP numbers: Chicken Road, Chicken Road 2.0, and, as “New”, Chicken Royal and Rabbit Road alongside other instant games. The wording is straightforward: arcade‑style, fast, “know when to cash out”, with RTP written right next to each game.
On that same page, Chicken Road is framed as an arcade pick‑and‑step game with 98% RTP and four risk levels; Chicken Royal is marked 96.5% RTP, Rabbit Road 95.5% RTP. That’s the core of InOut’s positioning: they sell speed and tension, but they don’t hide the math. For crash and chicken‑style games, that combination is exactly what most players look for in 2026.
Chicken Road the original 98% benchmark
Chicken Road is the game that put InOut on the crash map. On the official site it’s described as a “pick‑and‑step” arcade where you guide a chicken along a trapped path, decide how far to go and choose when to cash out. External assessments back up the numbers: reviews consistently mention 98% RTP and a very high potential max win (above x3,200 of your stake in some breakdowns).
That 98% is not just a marketing line. In a world where many crash games sit around 94–96% or even lower, a properly configured Chicken Road build gives up less of your stake to the house edge over time. It does not make the game less volatile – the “crash at any step” structure still bites – but it changes the long‑term expectation. For a lot of crash fans, this is why Chicken Road became the default recommendation: the risk is obvious, but the numbers are honest.
What also matters is how simple the presentation is. No complex HUD, no extra mini‑slots on top. Just a road, a character, a visible path and a cash‑out button. That makes it an easy entry point for players who never touched crash before but understand what it means to cross a dangerous road.
Chicken Road 2.0 same idea, more danger and tuned RTP
By mid‑2025 InOut released Chicken Road 2.0, and it is now a key part of the 2026 line‑up. On the official games page they describe it as a sequel with “more danger with speeding cars and adjustable difficulty” while keeping the same core idea: each step boosts your multiplier until the crash. It’s also explicitly marked as fully mobile‑optimised and fast‑loading, which matters when most traffic comes from phones.
Casino data gives more detail:
- RTP around 95.5% in common deployments.
- Min bet as low as 0.01, same as the first game.
- Release date April 15, 2025, so it now enters 2026 as a “mature” title with data behind it.
So why drop from 98% to roughly 95.5%? Because the sequel adds higher multipliers, faster pacing and sharper swings. The studio essentially moved some of the “budget” from RTP into extra volatility and visual upgrades. For players this creates a choice: stick to the original Chicken Road when you want the softest math possible, or go to 2.0 when you’re okay trading a few RTP points for higher peaks and a livelier spectacle.
Technically both games still live in the same crash family. You place a bet, you watch a multiplier climb as your chicken runs into traffic, and you decide when enough is enough before the round stops. InOut just gives you two flavours of the same decision: extremely efficient and slightly more aggressive.
Chicken Royal taking the chicken into a slot format
With Chicken Royal, InOut did something different: they moved the chicken theme into a classic slot, but kept the fast, clean approach. Officially it’s a 5×3 slot with 20 fixed paylines, set on a cartoon street with police cars, fire trucks, food vans and the familiar chicken as symbols. The game carries a 96.5% RTP and a max win of x6750 your bet.
This is not a crash game anymore. There is no manual cash‑out and no single “step too far”. Instead you get free spins, sticky wilds and wild multipliers, with a fixed top jackpot of $20,000 across stakes. The point, however, is the same: simple layout, readable symbols, and a paytable that does not require a long PDF to understand.
From a portfolio perspective, Chicken Royal is how InOut keeps crash players inside the same visual universe when they want a change of pace. You might spend most of the session in Chicken Road or 2.0, then open Chicken Royal to chase a slot‑style bonus without leaving the chicken aesthetic and without moving into extreme volatility. For operators it also helps with cross‑selling: “if you like our chicken crash games, here’s a slot with the same character and a respectable 96.5% RTP.”
Rabbit Road pushing the concept to an extreme
The fourth pillar of the 2026 chicken line‑up is Rabbit Road. Technically it’s a rabbit, not a chicken, but the structure is from the same family. InOut brands it as a “fast crash‑style game” where you guide a rabbit collecting carrots while the multiplier increases, and you must cash out before a crash ends the round.
The important part is how far they push the top end. According to detailed game descriptions, Rabbit Road can theoretically reach a multiplier of up to 3,608,855x your bet in its “Hardcore” mode if you collect 18 carrots in one run. That sort of ceiling is mostly there to showcase the math, not as an everyday expectation, but it tells you exactly what Rabbit Road is for: players who are comfortable with extreme variance.
RTP is listed around **95.5%** on the official InOut portfolio page. So again, the trade‑off is clear: slightly lower return than Chicken Road’s 98%, in exchange for the possibility of wild top multipliers and a more gamified run with collectable items. It is a logical extension of the same design line: start with a grounded, high‑RTP road; add a faster, sharper sequel; then build an over‑the‑top cousin for those who want to push their luck as far as it goes.
Fast, transparent, character‑driven
If you line these titles up—Chicken Road, Chicken Road 2.0, Chicken Royal, Rabbit Road—three things repeat every time.
First, speed. None of these games are built for long, slow sessions with complex sub‑menus. They load quickly, rounds start almost instantly, and most of the tension plays out in a few seconds.
Second, transparent RTP. InOut makes a point of putting RTP values right on the portfolio page: 98% for Chicken Road, 95.5% for Rabbit Road and Chicken Road 2.0, 96.5% for Chicken Royal. In a crash segment where many products hide down at 90–94%, that openness is a differentiator.
Third, characters instead of curves. Whether it’s a chicken on a dangerous road, a chicken on slot reels, or a rabbit collecting carrots, InOut wraps crash‑style math in an image that is easy to understand at a glance. You don’t need to parse a graph to know what’s going on; you just see how far the character has gone and how greedy you’re willing to be.
For 2026, that is likely to remain InOut’s edge in the crash and instant space. While other studios experiment with different symbols and abstract charts, they are doubling down on a clear, simple universe of “road” games with high RTP and visible risk—and building around it with slots and extreme variants like Rabbit Road.