The two real formats
- House-banked sliders — Stake, BC.Game, DuckDice, Roobet. You vs. RNG, ~1% edge.
- Peer-to-peer pots — Rollit. Real players, shared pot, 5% rake on winnings only.
What to actually compare
- Long-term EV. 1% edge on every roll compounds fast. 5% rake only on wins is dramatically cheaper at scale.
- Withdrawal speed. Best sites push in minutes; worst hold for days.
- KYC threshold. Some sites require ID after a small deposit; others wait until you withdraw five figures.
- Provably fair audit trail. Real PF lets you verify any roll. Marketing-only PF is meaningless.
- Asset list. BTC, ETH, USDC, USDT cover 95% of players. Niche tokens are nice-to-have.
Where house-banked sites genuinely win
- Single-player convenience — no waiting on opponents.
- Brand recognition (Stake's UFC sponsorship is hard to miss).
- Auto-bet scripts for grinding bonuses.
Where Rollit wins
- No baked-in house edge — pots come from other players, not a casino float.
- Social — voice chat, friend list, private tables.
- 5% rake on winnings only (lose a round, pay nothing).
- Multi-chain crypto in and out, no card processors.
Bottom line
If you want to grind a tiny edge against the house with autobet scripts, the slider sites are mature and reliable. If you want real opponents, a real table, and the best long-term math on your bankroll, PvP dice is a category of one.