Stake
#1Stake is the operator that other crypto casinos are measured against. The catalogue runs into the thousands across slots, live dealer, and the studio's own Originals (Crash, Plinko, Mines, Dice, Limbo are the in-house references).
Crypto sportsbooks paired with casino accounts
Crypto sportsbooks paired with casino accounts in a single platform are the standard product structure at operators like Rollbit, Stake, BC.Game, Cloudbet, and Lucky Block. The advantage of unified accounts is bankroll mobility — funds move between sportsbook and casino instantly without bridge friction. The competitive landscape for sportsbook is meaningfully different from casino: line quality, market depth (especially for niche sports), and limits at the high end matter more than bonus headlines. The casinos below all ship a real sportsbook product with competitive line shopping; pure-play crypto sportsbooks are a separate vertical.
Stake is the operator that other crypto casinos are measured against. The catalogue runs into the thousands across slots, live dealer, and the studio's own Originals (Crash, Plinko, Mines, Dice, Limbo are the in-house references).
BC.Game competes with Stake directly on catalogue breadth and crypto-asset support — the supported-coin list is one of the longest in the industry, reaching well beyond the standard BTC/ETH/SOL/USDT four into long-tail altcoins, meme coins, and chain-specific assets. The bonus structure leans heavier on recurring promotions (daily wheel, lucky spin, tier-up rewards) than on a single fat welcome match, which suits players who plan to stick around for a while.
Shuffle launched in 2023 and grew faster than any other top-tier crypto casino in recent memory, driven partly by a substantial native-token (SHFL) airdrop programme that gave early players genuine equity in the platform's growth. The product itself is among the most polished in the category — UI, mobile experience, and live-casino integration all sit at the top end.
Sportsbook at crypto casinos is the parallel product to casino games — markets on real sporting events with operator-set odds and player wagers settling at event conclusion. The major crypto-native operators (Stake, BC.Game, Rollbit, Shuffle, Sportsbet.io) all run integrated sportsbooks alongside their casino product. The math is fundamentally different from casino games — sports markets have vig (typically 5-10% across markets) rather than fixed house edges, and player skill can move expected value meaningfully.
Crypto-sportsbook differentiators from traditional fiat sportsbooks: instant withdrawals (no banking delays), broader sports coverage in non-US markets, frequent in-play markets, and looser bet limits at the high-roller end. The trade-off: regulatory ambiguity in some markets, less polished apps than the major US sportsbook brands (DraftKings, FanDuel), and occasional limits or markets pulled for sharp action.
Sportsbook bonus structures (covered in detail on the bonuses page) differ from casino bonuses — free bets, deposit matches with low wagering, odds boosts, parlay insurance. The math is governed by the vig and minimum-odds rules rather than playthrough multipliers. For dedicated sports bettors, the welcome offer is usually a small fraction of the operator's long-run cost; for casino-first players occasionally placing sports bets, the bonus structures don't transfer cleanly from the casino math framework.
Operational fields that determine whether the sportsbook experience matches your expectations.
Patterns that show up across operators and degrade the math or the experience.
For markets and odds, comparable to major fiat books. For app polish and customer-service depth, the major US/UK brands often lead. For withdrawal speed, crypto wins (instant vs banking-delayed).
Yes, if you're a sharp bettor with edge on specific markets. The vig (5-10% across markets) is the structural cost; beating it requires more accurate prediction than the operator's pricing. Most recreational bettors lose long-term to vig + variance.
Operator economics. Consistent winners are negative-expected-value customers from the operator's perspective. Limits reduce the loss exposure per customer. The practice is universal across crypto and fiat books.
Football (soccer) is the largest. American sports (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL) are heavily covered. Tennis, MMA, esports are mid-coverage. Niche sports (darts, snooker, cricket variants outside the IPL) are covered by some operators.