Updated at: 01.05.2026
Created at: 26.04.2026
Duckdice is built around dice gambling and privacy, with sports betting as its secondary strength. The platform revolves around its two original dice games, with bonuses, lossbacks, and tournaments all tied to them. On the side, there’s a sportsbook with 60+ sports and esports, backed by regular free bet offers.

Casino games exist, but they’re clearly not the focus. With fewer than 300 titles, it’s not somewhere you go for regular casino play. From my perspective, Duckdice is active if you’re here for dice and sports. Outside of that, the experience becomes limited.
You can call me Cryptogambler.
For years, I’ve focused on what happens at a casino after you sign up, not just how it presents itself. I don’t just browse. I register, claim bonuses, play through them, and withdraw. I also test the game selection, providers, customer support, and security setup.
For DuckDice, I followed the same process and skipped nothing. Every area of the casino was tested. The goal is to see whether DuckDice is actually reliable, or just another platform that shouldn’t be taken more seriously than its name suggests.
The .io domain already gave it away for me. I just knew Duckdice is a crypto-first casino. I didn’t need to dig too far to confirm it. The design feels simple and restrained, with no heavy visuals or bright distractions. Still, the top bonus banner does enough to pull attention.
Right below it, there’s a clean strip showing the major offerings – dice, casino games, sports betting, and staking. As you scroll, the activity builds up. Game rows, providers, recent winners, bonuses, and side quests all stacked together. It gives the impression of a platform trying to stay active and engaging.
At the bottom, its crypto focus becomes clearer with the list of 30+ supported coins. After that, I found all of the casino’s credentials. It openly displays its licensing, company information, and third-party certifications.
Duckdice is operated by Zentari Limitada and licensed by the government of the Autonomous Island of Anjouan. I also saw certification from iTechs Lab.
I take that level of transparency seriously. It doesn’t in itself guarantee reliability, but it shows the casino is committed to fairness and shows an effort to build trust.
The homepage pushes a $10,000 welcome package across multiple deposits, and the bonus page backs that up. Where I started to question things was the lack of clear terms upfront. On the surface, it’s a 200% up to $2,500 bonus on each of your first four deposits. Sounds strong. But that’s not the full picture.
When I dug into it, I found that only deposits of $100 or more qualify for the 200%. Anything lower drops to 100%. The 100% offer itself isn’t the issue. It’s the way it’s presented. That lack of clarity makes the offer feel more misleading than it should be. However, the bigger limitation is where the bonus actually works. You can only play the casino’s two original dice games. No slots, no crash, no live casinos. Just dice.
That’s a serious constraint.

Once I confirmed the bonus was locked to dice, the next step was understanding the actual terms. They’re not clearly listed, so I got most of them while trying to claim the bonus and others through support.
Here’s what I found:
The no-expiry condition stands out. It removes the usual pressure of rushing through wagering.
However, the house edge on the dice games increases depending on your bonus:
That’s something you can’t ignore.
Overall, I’d call the bonus fair, but not as attractive as the headline suggests.
The 40x wagering isn’t low, but without a time limit, it becomes more manageable.
With the unlimited bet and no win cap, it could be rewarding for some players.
Still, having a whole $10,000 just to use on dice games alone feels restrictive.
When I visited the platform a few months ago, Duckdice wasn’t really a full casino. It was more of a crypto dice gambling site. There were no slots, no live games, no crash, and no tables. Just two in-house dice games, despite having been around for about nine years. So yeah, I was genuinely surprised this time. The platform now lists 297 games, which shows a clear push to expand beyond its original setup.
From what I saw, the library includes:

The two dice games it used to have – Original Dice and Range Rice – are still there. Now grouped under the “Originals” category. In terms of providers, there are DuckDice itself, Pragmatic Play, Evolution, TaDa Gaming, BGaming, Hacksaw, and 10 others. That said, let’s keep it realistic.
Even with the expansion, Duckdice still doesn’t match the size of larger crypto casinos. While the variety is improving, I noticed some gaps. There’s still no video poker, scratch cards or bingo.
I expected a crypto-based payment system, and that’s exactly what I found. Duckdice runs like a full blockchain casino with a multi-wallet system. At the time of testing, I counted 39 supported coins, including BTC, ETH, LTC, and USDT. In practice, that means you can hold balances across multiple crypto wallets within one account.

Fiat support exists as well, but it’s selective. Around 17 local currencies are supported CAD, MYR, NGN, and IDR among them but USD and EUR are noticeably absent. If your currency is listed, you avoid conversion fees when depositing.
For those without crypto, you can buy coins using Visa, Mastercard, Google Pay, or Apple Pay through Swapped. Gift cards and skins are also supported, which is less common.
After testing the cashier, here are the key details I found:
Overall, the system is built for crypto users first. Fiat is there, but clearly secondary.
At Duckdice, players have the chance to stay completely anonymous. But only certain conditions. During signup, I only needed an email. No name, no personal details. A username is generated automatically. I was able to deposit, play, and withdraw using crypto without submitting personal information or documents.
However, the moment you use fiat, KYC is triggered. Thus, anonymity depends entirely on how you play. Stick to direct crypto transactions and follow the casino’s rules, and then you can avoid verification. In my opinion, this setup works well for privacy-focused players. But it’s not absolute anonymity. It’s conditional.
On my first visit to the website on a mobile browser, I was prompted to install the app. At this point, I’ve seen enough of these to be cautious. And as expected, it’s a progressive web app (PWA), not a native app. But that barely changes anything.
I used the PWA for testing, and it performs well:
Switching to a browser gives you the same functionality, just without the full-screen immersion. The address bar stays visible, which breaks the “app” feel slightly.
You might never really know how important customer support is until you need help urgently at a casino. I didn’t wait until there was a problem before testing all the support channels on the site.
Here’s how it performed:
Good fit if you:

I’d avoid if you:

Once gambling stops feeling like entertainment, it’s already going too far. Players must do everything possible not to reach this stage. From what I’ve seen, many anonymous casinos don’t offer much in terms of responsible gambling tools. That’s partly one of the trade-offs for minimal verification.
At first glance, Duckdice didn’t impress me either. The responsible gambling page in the footer is light on practical detail. But digging into the account settings told a different story.
Under “Limits”, I found several control tools:
The tools are there, but not just presented clearly upfront. Still, it’s way better than not having them at all.
After testing DuckDice, it’s clear that the platform is built around crypto dice gambling first. It’s expanding into slots and live games, but that part still feels like an afterthought. The sportsbook is more developed, with a wide range of markets that add real value beyond dice.
On the crypto side, it performs well. Deposits and withdrawals were instant in my case, and the number of supported coins gives enough flexibility. Staying anonymous also works, as long as you stick to crypto.
The limitations show up elsewhere. Fiat support is limited, and once you use it, verification becomes unavoidable. The welcome bonus is restricted to dice, which cuts off most of the game library.
My Author Perspective
DuckDice works if you’re focused on dice and sports betting, with crypto as your main payment method. If you’re looking for a broader casino experience with flexible bonuses, it doesn’t deliver yet. As for me, I’d come back, but only for specific sessions. It’s not somewhere I’d rely on long-term casino play.
