Play the €100,000 Money Spinner at Paddy Power Poker

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
2 min read
Paddy Power Poker

There is only one week remaining in the €100,000 Money Spinner promotion at Paddy Power Poker so if you want to get involved in it and possibly win €1,000 cash, you need to act sooner rather than later.

The €100,000 Money Spinner concludes at 8:59 p.m. GMT on Apr. 1 which gives you less than a week to get involved and win some prizes. You can earn up to five spins per week by completing weekly missions. The two missions you can choose from are simple, the first needs you to earn 100 points and the second is to wager at least €10 on slot games in the poker software.

Once you have your spins secured, you will win one of the prizes shown in the table below:

PrizeValueNumber of PrizesChance of winningTotal Value
€1,000 cash€1,000100.006146%€10,000
€100 cash€100500.030730%€5,000
€10 cash€101500.092189%€1,500
€5 cash€55000.307295%€2,500
€1 cash€130,00018.437711%€30,000
€0.50 Wild Twister ticket€0.5052,00031.9587%€26,000
€5,000 Money Spinner Freeroll ticket 80,00049.16723%€25,000

If you win a €5,000 Money Spinner Freeroll ticket you need to be able to play in the tournament at 9:00 p.m. BST on Apr. 1. The freeroll opens for registration on Mar. 26. The freeroll is an all-in shootout so everyone is set all-in before each hand until a winner is determined; only the final nine players receive prize money.

Claim Your Welcome Pack Today

Download Paddy Power Poker via PokerNews today and you get claim a special welcome pack. Deposit €5 and you’ll receive €20 in bonuses. These bonuses are made up of two €5 Twister tokens, a €5 entry to a special No-Lose tournament where you receive your €5 buy-in back if you bust before the money places, and a €5 Mobile Online Heads-Up Tournament entry.

The welcome bonus is a 100 percent up to €200 first deposit bonus so you may want to deposit more than €5 to maximize the value of this welcome package.

Share this article
Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

More Stories

Other Stories