Just for fun — virtual points, no real money on this site
JI Community games

Sic Bo

The classic three-dice table game. Spread your chips across Big and Small, exact totals, single numbers, doubles, triples and two-dice combos — then roll. Every bet pays at authentic casino odds.

Loading…

Just for fun — virtual points, no real money. 18+

How to play

How to play Sic Bo

Sic Bo — literally "precious dice" — is one of the oldest dice games in the world, and the board may look busy at first, but the idea is simple: three dice are rolled, and you bet on what they will show. You can stack chips on as many squares as you like in a single round. Back the table to come up Small (a total of 4–10) or Big (11–17) for an even-money payout, call an exact total for prizes that climb to 60:1, bet that a chosen single number shows on one, two or three dice, or chase the rare doubles and triples for the headline odds. The server rolls three fair dice and pays every chip on the board at once.

Each square carries its own house edge, baked into the printed odds. The even-money Big and Small bets are the friendliest on the table, while a specific triple — three of one exact number — is a true long shot that pays 180:1 but lands roughly once every 216 rolls. The dice run on a cryptographic random generator, the same provably-fair engine used across the arcade, so every roll is independent and the odds you see are exactly what settle. A fixed edge keeps each bet's long-run RTP just under break-even — here it is all virtual points, so treat Sic Bo as a relaxed way to feel the variance swing from steady even-money to wild long shots.

Rules

  1. Pick a chip value, then tap any square to stake it; tap again to stack more. Right-click or long-press a square to clear that bet.
  2. Your total stake across every square must land between 10 and 100 points; the live counter turns red if you go under or over.
  3. Small (4–10) and Big (11–17) pay 1:1 — but any triple loses both.
  4. An exact total pays by how rare it is: 7 or 14 pay 12:1, the extremes 4 and 17 reach 60:1.
  5. A single number pays 1:1, 2:1 or 3:1 depending on whether it shows on one, two or three dice.
  6. A specific double pays 10:1, any triple pays 30:1, and a specific triple pays a huge 180:1; a two-dice combo pays 5:1.
  7. Press roll, the three dice settle, and every winning chip is paid at once. Net wins are capped at +500 points per round and per day, so the biggest hits may be trimmed to that ceiling.

Tips from Jérôme

  • Big and Small carry the lowest house edge on the board (about 2.8%) — they are the steady backbone of a session, win or lose.
  • The shiny 180:1 triple is a lottery ticket: it lands about once in 216 rolls. Bet it small, for the thrill, not as your main play.
  • Spreading chips across many squares does not lower the edge — you simply trade a few big swings for lots of small ones. That is your volatility dial.
  • Dice have no memory. A number that "is due" after a cold streak is exactly as likely as any other — that is pure variance, not a pattern.
  • Virtual points, just for fun — decide how many rolls you will play, enjoy the clatter of the dice, and stop when you said you would.
Related gamesDiceKenoGlossary: House edge
Want to play for real?

Sic Bo for real money

Here it's free, virtual points, to learn the mechanic. To play with real money, here are the casinos I test — affiliate links. 18+, play responsibly.

BetifyStakeMega DiceRainbetBrutal CasinoHugoBetAll casinos →

🔗 Affiliate links · 18+ · Gamble responsibly