Craps by Play'n GO: Overview
Craps is an RNG-based table game from Play'n GO, released 19 March 2025. Rather than reels and paylines, you get a fully digital craps table with authentic dice mechanics, multiple bet types, and dealer commentary. Three visual modes let you switch between vintage, classic, and modern aesthetics. For a high roller used to chasing slot bonus rounds, I want to be upfront: this is a pure table game, not a slot. Evaluate it accordingly.

Bet Types and Gameplay Mechanics
Gameplay runs in two phases: the come-out roll and the point phase. You place bets before the dice roll, and depending on the outcome you either win immediately, lose, or move into the point phase where rolls continue until resolution. Bet sizes range from 0.5 to 5,000, which gives decent scope for larger stakes.
Pass Line and Don't Pass are the bread-and-butter wagers, both paying 1:1. Come and Don't Come bets mirror that structure during the point phase. Field Bets pay 2:1 on 2 and 12, 1:1 on other qualifying numbers. Place Bets, Buy Bets, Big Six/Eight, and Hardways add layers of complexity with varying odds. Single-roll propositions like Any 7 (4:1), Any Craps (7:1), and the 2 or 12 Bet (30:1) carry the highest payouts but the worst expected value.
Hovering over any bet on the table gives you a quick summary, which is useful if you are not fluent in craps terminology. I would stick to even-money bets until the mechanics click. For serious players, the real edge here is bet selection driving RTP, not any bonus feature.
RTP, Volatility, and Win Potential
RTP ranges between 83.33% and 99.55%, entirely dependent on which bets you place. Stick to Pass Line and the Odds bet and you are operating near the top of that range. Drift into single-roll propositions like Any 7, and the house edge climbs sharply. Max win sits at 45,875 with a 1-in-36 probability on the best-paying single outcome, while the highest multiplier on a single bet type caps at 30x.
For a bonus hunter, the ceiling is too low for this variance profile. A 30x single-bet cap is not going to move the needle on a serious bankroll. Combined bets can push the total higher, but you are spreading risk across multiple outcomes with no compounding mechanic. I would not recommend this as a grind game for bonus wagering either; the wide RTP range means operators could weight it differently in bonus terms.
Visual Modes and Interface
Three visual modes are available: vintage, classic, and modern. Switching requires restarting the game, which is a minor annoyance. Dealer commentary adds some atmosphere during rolls, making the RNG experience feel slightly less sterile than most digital craps tables. Interface is clean, responsive on both desktop and mobile, and betting options are clearly laid out. Roll history tracks every outcome in real time. Not flashy, but functional.










