Reference

Open John Hunter on esball

John Hunter brings the desert-chase style of Pragmatic Play into one tidy shelf, with Book of Tut, Tomb of the Scarab Queen and Quest for Bermuda Riches ready…

Book of TutScarab QueenBermuda RichesPragmatic Play
esball Open John Hunter on esball
esball Explore the John Hunter series

Explore the John Hunter series

We group the John Hunter titles by studio so the same desert-chase feel stays easy to follow from one room to the next. You can open John Hunter and the Book of Tut, John Hunter and the Tomb of the Scarab Queen, or John Hunter and the Quest for Bermuda Riches from one shelf, then compare the symbol mix and round rhythm

without searching through a larger catalogue.

TOMB TO MERLIN

Switch across John Hunter titles

These three cards show the range inside the series: one leans on relic art, one on tomb pacing, and one on a brighter treasure trail.

Tomb of the Scarab Queen
Book of Tut
Quest for Bermuda Riches
esball mobile gaming
PHONE FIRST

Browse John Hunter on mobile

On phone, the John Hunter shelf keeps the key buttons close to the reels, so you can open a room, read the symbol set and return to the last title…

Portrait mode
Tap reels
Session resume
Sound toggle
esball mobile gaming
ROUND HELP

Open help for John Hunter

If a John Hunter session pauses or a title takes longer than expected to load, we check the game name, the round id and the device…

Live chat Use live chat when the room does not resume cleanly.
Session check If a page freezes after you open Book of Tut or Tomb of the…
Device help When a title looks cramped on a smaller screen, we can help you switch…
CLEAR TRACKING

Explore John Hunter with clear controls

We keep the John Hunter shelf plain enough to check at a glance: studio name, game title and room path are all visible before you open a title.

Studio label

Each card shows the studio name beside the title, so you can see that the John Hunter room comes from the correct source before you enter it there.

In-room wording

We keep the same title spelling and symbol names you see inside the game, which makes it easier to match the page to the room after it loads.

Round trail

If you return after a break, the title and round trail make it simpler to reconnect to the same John Hunter session and confirm where you left off.

Device fit

We check the series on common Android and iPhone screen sizes so the reels, menu and symbol labels stay usable without zooming or sideways scrolling for you today.

Local access

Where local law permits, the title remains available; where it does not, the room stays hidden rather than showing a broken entry on your screen, so you know the status at a glance.

Support trace

Our team can trace the exact title name and room path from your chat, which helps us answer John Hunter questions without sending you through a long chain.

Switch to our John Hunter set

Compared with sites that scatter the John Hunter range across a long shelf, ours keeps the series grouped so you can move from Book of Tut to Tomb…

Grouped titlesWe keep the John Hunter titles together, so you do not have to search through mixed rooms to find the series entry you want quickly in one place.
Exact namesThe title spelling matches the room spelling, which helps when you move between Book of Tut, Tomb of the Scarab Queen and Quest for Bermuda Riches without guessing.
Fewer tapsA tighter shelf means fewer extra clicks before the room opens, so you spend more time comparing John Hunter titles and less time scrolling around the page again.
Cleaner mobileThe cards stay readable on phone, with enough space around the title art that you can pick a room without pinching or zooming twice on the small screen.
Clear support pathIf a title acts oddly, the chat route points straight to the John Hunter session instead of a broad site question, which speeds up the fix for you.
Local access ruleAccess depends on local law, and the page makes that plain before you open anything, so you know whether the title is available in your region before you choose it.
Same studio moodThe series feels consistent from room to room, yet each title keeps its own symbol mix and art style, which gives you room to choose more easily later.

Browse the John Hunter board

The John Hunter page works because the room names, art style and symbol sets are easy to scan before you open a title.

Scarab art

The scarab-themed rooms use bold relic art and warm colours, so the theme reads instantly and you can tell at a glance which John Hunter title you are about to open.

Book symbols

Book icons are a core sign of the series, and we keep them visible in the card art so you can spot the title style before the room loads.

Tomb pace

The tomb-themed entries feel tight and direct, with a clear reel rhythm that suits short breaks and quick returns when you want the same John Hunter mood again.

Treasure trail

The brighter chase titles bring a lighter colour set and sharper icon contrast, which helps you separate one room from another without reading a long block of text.

Reel clarity

We use the title art to show reel style, symbol weight and theme direction, so the series stays readable on mobile and on wider screens at once too.

Room switch

Because the cards sit together, you can move from one John Hunter room to another in a few taps and keep the same search theme in view without losing context.

Open questions about John Hunter

If you want a quick sense of what sits inside John Hunter, the answers below cover the series names, how the rooms sit together, and what changes when you move from one title to another. We keep the answers short so you can decide which room to open next without reading a long block of copy, and access stays subject to local law where it is allowed.

You will find the series entries we keep in one place, including John Hunter and the Book of Tut, John Hunter and the Tomb of the Scarab Queen and John Hunter and the Quest for Bermuda Riches.

The title cards show the mood, symbol style and studio label together, so you can compare the rooms quickly and decide whether you want a tomb feel or a brighter treasure run.

Yes. The cards, buttons and reels stay legible in portrait, and you can reopen the same title without losing your place when you switch between phone and desktop.

The series keeps the same search spirit, but the symbol mix, colour palette and pacing change from room to room, which gives each John Hunter title its own shape.

Check the exact title name, the studio label and the symbol set shown on the card, then open the room you want. If a title is not allowed in your region, access depends on local law.

Send us the exact title name and the round id from your screen. We can trace the session, confirm what happened and tell you whether a reload will bring you back to the same point.