Blueprint has been back to the Eye of Horus well more than once, but this version at least brings a reason to return. Eye of Horus Legacy of Gold keeps the familiar Egyptian setup, then threads in a collect and upgrade system that gives the base game something to work toward besides waiting around for the next feature.
That makes it feel a bit less like another repaint of the same old temple walls. It is still very much an Eye of Horus slot, with classic symbols, desert gold tones, and a bonus-led structure, but the collect trail and split feature path give it a slightly different rhythm from the usual series formula.
Eye of Horus Legacy of Gold sticks to the series look with almost stubborn confidence. The reel set is wrapped in sandy stone textures, gold trim, and familiar Egyptian iconography, so there is no danger of mistaking it for anything else. If you have seen an Eye of Horus game before, this one will feel immediately recognisable.
That familiarity is not really a problem here. The symbols are clean, easy to read, and thematically consistent, with the Eye of Horus, Anubis, scarabs, birds, and fans carrying most of the visual load. It is not a flashy slot in the modern sense, but it does not need to be. The important part is that the layout leaves room for the collect features and the two bonus routes without turning the screen into a complete traffic jam.
Eye of Horus Legacy of Gold uses a 6 reel, 4 row layout with 4,096 ways to win. Wins are formed by matching symbols on adjacent reels from left to right.
Cash Collect is the mechanic doing most of the heavy lifting here. Cash Prize symbols are live on all six reels, and when a Collect symbol lands on reel 1 or reel 6, it expands and gathers the visible cash values. If a Cashpot symbol is in view at the same time, that prize is awarded as well.
The more useful part is what happens afterwards. Once a successful collection lands in the base game, a new upgrade is unlocked. The game gradually builds toward extra collect functions such as Respin, Boost, Max Collect, and Multi Collect, and once those upgrades are unlocked, they stay active in the main game and the bonus where applicable. That makes the setup feel more progressive than the average collect slot, even if it still relies on patience.
One branch of the bonus is Eye of Horus Spins. It begins with 10 spins, and any unlocked Collect symbols remain active throughout the round. On any spin where a Collect symbol lands, it awards the value of every Cash Prize symbol currently in view.
This feature also has its own progression ladder. Collecting 3, 6, 9, and 12 Collect symbols awards 5 additional spins each time, while also increasing the minimum cash prize value from x2 to x3, then x5, and eventually x10. It is the more direct of the two bonus types, since it keeps leaning into the collect mechanic rather than moving off into symbol upgrades.
The second route is Legacy of Gold Spins, which also starts with 10 spins. Here, the Cash Prize and Collect symbols are removed, and the focus shifts to a symbol trail next to the reels. Special top symbols with a golden orb add progress to that trail, and filling all 10 stages upgrades symbols until they reach the top paying one.
This route feels more like a transformation feature than a collect round. It also has stronger retrigger potential, since landing 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 bonus scatters during the feature awards 4, 6, 8, 10, or 12 extra spins. If Eye of Horus Spins is the practical route, Legacy of Gold Spins is the one trying to be a bit more dramatic.
The four Cashpots are fixed prizes within the game and are only paid when collected by a Collect symbol. The available values are Mini at 20x, Minor at 50x, Major at 200x, and Mega at 2500x the base stake.
That top prize gives the game a decent hook, though like most features of this type, it is more useful as a reason to keep an eye on the reels than as something to bank on. Multiple Cashpots can be won in the same game, which helps the mechanic feel a little less stingy.
Not every long running slot series needs another chapter, but this one at least tries to justify itself. We like that Eye of Horus Legacy of Gold gives the base game a bit of forward motion, because the collect upgrades stop it from feeling like pure filler between bonus rounds.
That said, it still has the Blueprint habit of making you work for the interesting bits. If the collect upgrades are slow to unlock, the game can feel more dutiful than lively, and the lower return models are hardly doing it any favours. Still, as series updates go, this is one of the better behaved ones. We would not call it a revelation, but it is a more thoughtful revisit than a lazy one.