Get Twisting at William Hill and win up to €1,000 cash Each Week

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
2 min read
William Hill

Twister tournaments are one of the most exciting formats William Hill offers thanks to them giving you the opportunity to turn a small investment into a potentially huge prize in a matter of minutes. Now they are potentially even more lucrative thank to William Hill hosting weekly leaderboards with €12,500 to be won every week.

Play Twister games between 12:00 a.m. BST on Monday through to 11:59 p.m. BST on Sunday and you will earn leaderboard points even if you do not manage to win a Twister tournament. Of course, you get your hands on more leaderboard points if you manage to triumph over your opponents, so it makes sense to find a fine balance between quantity and quality.

Twister Races Points

Buy-inTwister LostTwister Won
€112
€224
€5510
€101020
€202040
€5050100
€100100200

Earn enough leaderboard points to finish in the top 250 places and you are guaranteed a prize ranging from three €5 Twister tickets and cash prizes worth up to a cool €1,000. As the Twister leaderboards run every week, you could add quite a lot of money to your bottom line if you play Twister at William Hill exclusively.

Twister Races Prizes

PlacePrize
1€1,000 cash
2€700 cash
3€550 cash
4€400 cash
5€300 cash
6€200 cash and 3 x €10 Twister tickets
7-10€100 cash and 3 x €10 Twister tickets
11-50€50 cash and 4 x €5 Twister tickets
51-100€30 cash and 4 x €5 Twister tickets
101-150€20 cash and 4 x €5 Twister tickets
151-2503 x €5 Twister tickets

Download William Hill Today

Download William Hill today and you will receive a superb welcome package when you make a deposit of at least €10. Simply download William Hill Poker through our links and make a deposit of at least £10 using the bonus code “COMPN”, and you will instantly be awarded a £7 cash game ticket, £3 worth of tournament tickets, 10 free spins and £100 worth of bonus money.

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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.

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