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A Beginner's Guide to Live Casino

Live-dealer games sit between a slot and a night at a table: a real host, real cards, and a stream you watch unfold. They reward patience and a steady connection more than anything else.

How a live studio works

A host deals or spins on camera from a studio, and you place bets within a short window each round. Nothing is hidden - you see every card and result as it happens, usually with a chat panel alongside. Baccarat, blackjack and roulette are the mainstays; game-show formats like Crazy Time sit at the livelier end. The Casino page lays out the full floor.

Stakes, data and a steady line

Every room prints a minimum and maximum - start at a low-limit table, since the game plays identically at any stake. An HD stream uses roughly 1.5 to 2 MB a minute, so about 100 to 120 MB an hour; the standard-quality setting roughly halves that on a tight plan. If your signal wavers, a live table is the wrong pick - it needs a stable line to hold without stutter.
Are live casino games fair?

The deal happens on camera in real time, which is exactly why many players trust them - you watch every result rather than relying on an unseen RNG.

How much data will an hour of live casino cost me?

On HD, somewhere around 100 to 120 MB an hour; dropping to standard quality in the player roughly halves it.

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