ROLLIT

Game Formats

Dice gambling games — every format explained

Dice gambling has dozens of formats around the world. Here's how the most popular ones work, who they're best for, and how Rollit's player-vs-player high-roll compares.

Craps

The American casino classic. A shooter rolls two dice against a felt table; players bet on the outcome of one roll or a sequence of rolls. Craps has the lowest house edge of any casino game on certain bets (under 1.5%) but the rules are notoriously complex for beginners.

Sic Bo

A three-dice Asian table game where players bet on combinations and totals. Heavy house edge on most bets (up to 30%) — fun, but mathematically brutal.

Hazard

The medieval ancestor of craps, played in English gambling houses for centuries. Largely extinct online.

Crypto dice (you-vs-house)

The dominant online format: pick an "under" or "over" target, the site rolls one virtual die from 0–99.99, and you win if it lands on your side. Provably fair, fast, but you're always playing against the platform's margin.

High-Roll (peer-to-peer dice betting)

Rollit's format. 2–4 players ante into a pot, each rolls two dice, highest total wins. No house edge — the only fee is a 5% rake on the pot. This is the closest digital equivalent to a street-dice or back-room cash game, but with provably fair rolls and instant payouts.

Which format is best for you?

  • Want the lowest theoretical house edge? Craps "pass line" with full odds.
  • Want fast solo action? Crypto dice (you-vs-house).
  • Want to play against real people, with no house edge? Rollit's High-Roll.
  • Want exotic combination bets? Sic Bo.

Whatever format you prefer, set a budget before you sit down. Dice gambling is entertainment — fun when you win, fun when you lose, only if you bet what you can afford.

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