Dice Duel
Dice Duel is a head-to-head between two dice — one red, one blue. Each round both are rolled live and you bet on the result: which die lands higher, the combined total of the two, whether that total is odd or even, and exact-total markets that pay more for calling the number. It is fast, simple and one of the easiest Betgames titles to pick up.
| Format | Two-dice head-to-head |
|---|---|
| Bet on | Red vs blue, total, odd/even, exact total |
| Round speed | A new roll about every minute |
| Real money | Yes, at CasinOnline SA |
How a Dice Duel round plays out
Every round runs to a steady rhythm, with a fresh roll roughly once a minute. The studio presents two dice, one red and one blue, and a short window opens for you to place your bets. When the window closes, both dice are dropped together in full view of the camera, so there is no software animation deciding the result, just the physical roll settling on the table.
Once the dice come to rest, the faces are read and every market is settled at once. The red and blue values are compared for the duel, then added together for the total markets. You see the outcome immediately and the next betting window opens, which keeps the pace brisk without ever feeling rushed.
The markets and how the odds work
The headline bet is the duel itself, where you back the red die or the blue die to land higher. Because neither colour has any edge, this sits close to even money, with ties settled by the table rules shown in game. Alongside it, the total of the two dice can be played as odd or even and as high or low, both of which also sit near even money since each side covers a broad band of outcomes.
The exact total is the bolder market. Here you name the precise sum the two dice will reach, and because there is only one way to be right, it pays a far larger multiple than the even-money bets. If you want this explained in plain terms, the Odds Explained page breaks down how payouts scale with how rarely an outcome lands.
Who Dice Duel suits
Dice Duel rewards a calm, even-money style of play. If you like a result you can read at a glance and a stake you can size with confidence, the duel and the high-low and odd-even totals give you that without any guesswork. Many players keep to these markets for most of a session and treat the exact total as an occasional shot at a bigger return.
It pairs naturally with other live studio games. If you enjoy the quick numbered draw of Wheel Of Fortune, Dice Duel offers a similar one-minute cadence with simpler markets. New to the format altogether, the How To Play guide walks you through placing your first bet.
Frequently asked questions
How often does a new Dice Duel round start?
A fresh roll comes around roughly once a minute. A betting window opens, then both dice are rolled live and the result is settled before the next round begins.
What is the difference between the duel and the total bets?
The duel compares the red and blue dice to see which lands higher. The total adds both dice together, which you can then play as odd or even, high or low, or as an exact sum.
Why does the exact total pay more than the other bets?
Because there is only one way to be right, naming the precise sum is much harder than backing a broad even-money market. The rarer outcome is reflected in a larger payout multiple.
What happens if both dice show the same value?
A tie in the duel is handled by the table rules shown in the game. The odd, even, high and low total markets still settle normally on the combined value.
Is Dice Duel a game of skill?
No. Each roll is independent and the dice are dropped live, so there is no system that guarantees a win. It is a game of chance and should be played for entertainment within your limits.