Wild Toro Mobile
Wild Toro mobile information focuses on keeping the 5x4 grid, Day and Night modes, expanding reel states, Walking Wilds, Golden Rose Bonus and Midnight Bullfight readable on phones.

Wild Toro facts without invented metrics
ELK Studios recommends 1600 x 900 and 16:9 for desktop browser scaling; this page translates the visible product structure into Android and iPhone display characteristics.
The content uses structured headings, descriptive media, internal links and a large FAQ block so visitors can scan the product details quickly.
Wild Toro needs clear feature cues on smaller screens
Wild Toro has a compact 5x4 base, but its feature set is busy: Day and Night modes, expanding grid behavior, Walking Wilds, multiplier Wilds, Golden Rose Bonus and Midnight Bullfight. On a phone, the product has to keep those cues readable without turning the grid into a blur of tiny characters. Toro, Toritos and Matadors each need enough visual separation to show their roles.
A useful mobile page should describe product presentation rather than installation steps. The main mobile question is how the visible game structure behaves on Android phones, iPhones and casino browser views. The official 1600 x 900 desktop reference is not a phone specification, but it confirms that display ratio matters for the intended presentation.

Android screens need flexible grid framing
Android devices vary in screen size, browser chrome and pixel density. Wild Toro's expanding grid and sticky Wild elements make flexible framing important. A smaller phone should still show the 5x4 frame clearly, while a larger Android screen can give more breathing room to the character art and bonus states.
The character roles help mobile readability. Toro lands on reel 5 and moves left, Toritos land on reels 2, 3 or 4, and Matadors also land on reels 2, 3 or 4. Those patterns give the player a way to read the screen even when the layout is compact. Strong contrast between the Day and Night art also helps the mode distinction.
iPhone presentation benefits from strong visual hierarchy
iPhone displays usually provide high pixel density and stable color rendering, which works well for Wild Toro's illustrated style. The key is hierarchy: Toro should remain the main character, Toritos should be readable as sticky Wild helpers, Matadors should remain distinct as moving Wilds, and Golden Rose elements should be easy to identify when the bonus context appears.
Night mode also needs clear visual identity on iPhone because Midnight Bullfight is tied to the Moon and tall multiplier Wild coverage. A good mobile presentation should make Day and Night feel distinct while keeping controls predictable and the grid readable. That is why this page talks about display characteristics rather than a separate app process.

Expanding grid states should not hide character roles
When Toritos land, they expand the reels by 1 and award a respin. That row expansion changes the screen state, so mobile framing has to keep the added space visible. If the grid is cropped too heavily, the player can lose the relationship between sticky Wilds, expanding rows and Toro's leftward movement.
The same principle applies to Matadors. They move left and award respins, and when present with Toro they get charged, leaving Wilds or tall multiplier Wilds. Those effects need enough room to be read as movement paths. On mobile, a feature-led slot succeeds when the action remains legible without requiring the user to zoom or rotate constantly.
Golden Rose Bonus and Midnight Bullfight need readable objects
Golden Rose Bonus uses a new grid with a 2x2 Toro and dropping Golden Roses, Toritos and Matadors. On mobile, the 2x2 Toro should feel like a clear focal point, while the roses and characters remain distinct. The feature is built around movement and collection, so the path needs to be visible.
Midnight Bullfight has a different visibility requirement. It involves tall multiplier Wilds covering up to 5 reels. A phone display should preserve the height and coverage of those tall Wilds so the Night feature feels different from ordinary Wild movement. That difference is part of the product information users are searching for.

Android and iPhone summary
The mobile takeaway is straightforward: Wild Toro should remain readable as a character-led 5x4 slot with mode changes, expanding grid states and clearly separated bonus objects. The page does not need app-store claims or setup language to answer that intent.
For deeper feature detail, visitors can use the Features page for Toro, Toritos and Matadors, Golden Rose Bonus for the named bonus sequence, and Bonus Games for X-iter and Midnight Bullfight.
Wild Toro Mobile questions
Who created Wild Toro?
Wild Toro was created by ELK Studios, the studio named on the official game page.
What is the base Wild Toro format?
The official page describes Wild Toro as a 5 reel and 4 row charging slot.
What volatility modes are listed?
The game page lists Day as normal volatility and Night as high volatility.
What is the main bonus name?
The official page names Golden Rose Bonus as the bonus triggered when Toro collects a Golden Rose.
What is Midnight Bullfight?
Midnight Bullfight is listed as a Night feature where tall multiplier Wilds can cover up to 5 reels.
What does X-iter include?
The official page lists five X-iter modes from a 2.5x bet option to a 250x bet super bonus or Midnight Bullfight option.
What desktop size does ELK recommend?
ELK recommends 1600 x 900 for desktop browsers and 16:9 if scaling is required.
What does the mobile page cover?
It covers Android and iPhone display characteristics for the 5x4 grid, modes and feature visibility.
Why does the expanding grid matter on mobile?
Toritos can expand the reels by 1, so mobile framing needs to keep the changed grid readable.
What should Android presentation preserve?
Android presentation should preserve Toro, Toritos, Matadors and mode cues across varied screen sizes.
What should iPhone presentation preserve?
iPhone presentation should preserve character hierarchy, Golden Rose objects and Night-mode contrast.
Is this a setup article?
No. It is product information about mobile display and feature readability.
Does the mobile page make app-store claims?
No. It focuses on mobile casino browser presentation and avoids unsupported app claims.