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Dice: the oldest crypto game, in its cleanest form

Dice is Spribe's version of the game that started crypto gambling: pick a number range, roll, and win if the result lands inside it. There are no reels, no symbols and almost no house edge to hide anything behind. It is gambling reduced to a slider and a button, and that is exactly its appeal. Here is how it works.

What kind of game it is

Dice is an instant game built on one mechanic. A number is drawn from a fixed range each round, and before the roll you choose a target: roll under a value or roll over it. The slider sets your win chance anywhere from long shot to near certainty, and the payout adjusts automatically in inverse proportion. Want a 90 percent chance to win? The payout is barely above your stake. Want 50x? Your window shrinks to a sliver. Rounds resolve instantly, and the format descends directly from the dice sites that defined early Bitcoin gambling. Our slots guide covers how instant games differ from reel based maths.

The odds slider

The signature feature is that you set the odds yourself, continuously, on every bet. This makes Dice the most transparent game in the lobby: the relationship between chance and payout is printed on the screen, and moving the slider shows you exactly what the house keeps. The catch is that the transparency changes nothing. Every slider position carries the same thin negative expectation, and the martingale systems the format attracts, doubling after losses, only guarantee that a losing streak eventually meets either the table limit or the bottom of your wallet.

RTP and provably fair

Spribe's instant games publish fixed RTP figures rather than operator configurable builds, and Dice sits at the generous end of the catalogue, with sources citing figures from 97 up to around 99 percent depending on the version. Check the in game info screen for the number where you play. Rolls are provably fair: hashed server seeds published before each round let you verify afterwards that the result was fixed before your bet. Our RTP guide explains why even a 1 to 3 percent edge grinds balances down over volume, and the volatility guide shows how the slider position sets your swing size.

How to play Dice

Pick a budget, pick a slider setting you enjoy, and keep your stake flat. Flat betting at a high win chance produces long, calm sessions; flat betting at long odds produces lottery style sessions with rare thrills. Both are fine. What is not fine is progression systems, which convert a thin house edge into occasional catastrophic losses. The speed of the game is the other risk: hundreds of rolls an hour is easy, so use the limit tools on our responsible gambling page before you start, not after.

Is Dice worth playing?

As a curiosity and a discipline test, yes. It has the thinnest house take of almost anything in the lobby, complete transparency, and verifiable fairness. As entertainment it is minimal by design: no features, no theme, no build up, just probability with a button on it. Players who want spectacle should look at Aviator instead; players who want the purest possible odds will feel at home. Context on the studio is in our Spribe provider review, and licensed sites are in the casino reviews. It is entertainment, never an income plan. 18+.

Dice FAQ

Does a betting system work on Dice?

No. Every roll is independent and every slider position has the same negative expectation. Martingale style progressions end in a streak that exceeds either the max bet or your bankroll.

What is the RTP of Dice?

High for the lobby: cited figures range from about 97 to 99 percent depending on version. The in game info screen at your casino is the authoritative number.

Where can I play Dice?

Anywhere with Spribe's instant games, usually alongside Aviator and Mines. Use our reviews to choose a licensed operator with the full catalogue.