Game analysis

Standalone casino games need their own scoring.

A platform score can hide the real game risk. We separate mechanics, volatility, fairness proof and session controls for every major crypto gambling format.

These are source-backed editorial guides, not winning systems. Operator-specific RTP, provider rules, country access and bonus exclusions still need a casino-by-casino capture.

Guides

6

Source notes

18

Core checks

6

Winning systems

0

Crash

High speed

Crash games compress risk into very short rounds. The guide focuses on multiplier curves, auto-cashout defaults, seed verification, loss velocity and UI pressure.

Review focus

Multiplier curve, auto-cashout defaults, max win and house edge disclosure.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Testing whether a casino makes fairness proof and session controls visible before the first bet. Avoid if: You tend to chase losses, raise stake after near misses, or use turbo/autoplay without hard limits.

RTP/edge: House edge is usually built into the crash-point distribution. A good lobby shows the game edge or links to a provably fair explanation before play.

Repeat risk: Auto-bet and instant-repeat controls can turn many small bets into a large session loss quickly.

Open guide

Mines

High volatility

Mines creates strong illusion-of-control pressure. The guide separates grid probability, reveal pacing, cashout discipline and volatility.

Review focus

Mine count, payout ladder, cashout value visibility and max-win limits.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Checking whether the UI clearly separates choice from randomness. Avoid if: You interpret safe clicks as skill or increase the mine count after a lucky streak.

RTP/edge: The edge is built into the payout ladder for each mine count. The payout table should show how risk changes before the grid starts.

Repeat risk: Manual clicking can feel slower than autoplay, but rapid reveals still create fast loss velocity when stake size is raised.

Open guide

Dice

High speed

Dice games are simple, but the review needs odds, house edge, autoplay and seed verification checks because small edge changes matter over many rolls.

Review focus

House edge, target odds, payout multiplier and autobet stop rules.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Auditing whether the operator edge remains visible while players change odds. Avoid if: You use Martingale or any staking system that doubles exposure after losses.

RTP/edge: Dice often exposes the edge directly through payout odds. Even a small house edge compounds fast over hundreds of rolls.

Repeat risk: Autobet plus progression systems can multiply exposure faster than the player notices.

Open guide

Plinko

High volatility

Plinko guides focus on risk rows, payout tables, max-win clarity and how the interface presents rare high-multiplier outcomes.

Review focus

Risk setting, row count, payout bucket probabilities and max multiplier presentation.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Testing whether high multipliers are balanced by clear probability and payout-table disclosure. Avoid if: Rare top multipliers make you ignore the distribution of low-payout buckets.

RTP/edge: The edge is embedded in bucket probabilities and multipliers. The full table should be visible before risk level or row count is selected.

Repeat risk: Repeat-drop buttons make it easy to chase the top bucket even when most outcomes are low payout.

Open guide

Slots

Variable

Slot reviews need provider trust, RTP display, bonus buy behavior, max win terms, wagering exclusions and game-specific volatility notes.

Review focus

RTP variant, volatility, bonus buy cost, max win and wagering exclusions.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Comparing provider transparency and bonus-term exclusions across casinos. Avoid if: Feature buys or bonus hunts make you stake more than your normal session budget.

RTP/edge: Slots usually rely on provider RTP, and some titles have operator-selectable RTP variants. The exact in-game RTP should be checked.

Repeat risk: Autospin and feature-buy buttons can concentrate spend without the friction of manual decisions.

Open guide

Live Casino

Medium volatility

Live casino analysis checks studio providers, table limits, game availability, KYC friction, latency, support paths and responsible gambling tools.

Review focus

Table limits, rule variants, side-bet edge, latency and provider restrictions.

Source basis

3 sources. Review use: Checking provider access, table-limit clarity and country restrictions before players enter a live lobby. Avoid if: High-limit tables, side bets or social pressure make it harder to stop at a fixed budget.

RTP/edge: Live games use table rules rather than seed hashes. The edge depends on rule variant, side bets and payout tables.

Repeat risk: Live casino rarely uses classic autoplay, but fast re-bet buttons and social pressure can create similar repeat-bet behavior.

Open guide

Game review checklist

Is the operator edge visible before play?
Can the player verify seed, hash, RTP or provider certification?
Do turbo mode, autoplay or feature buys increase loss velocity?
Are max bet, max win, withdrawal cap and bonus exclusions clear?
Are deposit limits, cooldowns and self-exclusion easy to find?
Does the game push chasing, streak myths or near-miss pressure?

Rules and likelihood

Each guide asks whether rules, payout tables, RTP or house edge are visible before play.

Fairness evidence

Crypto originals should expose provably-fair data; provider games should expose provider identity and certification context.

Safer-play friction

Autoplay, turbo, feature buys, fast re-bet buttons and hidden history are treated as risk multipliers.

Core guide

Provably fair does not cover every risk

Seed verification can help check a crypto-original result, but it does not prove payout speed, KYC outcome, bonus eligibility or local access.