What the Casino Alpha lobby contained when I tested it: roughly how many titles, which categories, and which studios. Counts and availability change and differ by country — treat the figures here as a snapshot, not a promise.
Titles featured on the lobby front page during my sessions. RTP values are the providers' published theoretical figures — they describe long-run averages, not what you should expect in a session.
How the catalogue is organized and roughly what each shelf held during my test.
The largest shelf by far — thousands of titles across dozens of studios, with volatility and RTP shown in each game's info panel. Demo mode was available for most slots without an account.
Roulette, blackjack, baccarat and game shows streamed by third-party studios. No demo mode here — live tables require a funded account, and table limits vary widely.
Progressive jackpot slots carry a pooled prize that grows until won; odds of hitting it are extremely small. Crash-style games are fast and volatile — set limits before trying them.
Most slots offered a demo mode in my test, playable without registration. Live-dealer games cannot be demoed — they require a real-money account.
Games come from third-party studios that publish RTP figures and are certified under their own licences. Fairness ultimately rests on the providers and the operator's licence — verify both yourself.
Catalogues are country-dependent: providers license their games per jurisdiction, so the lobby you see can be smaller than the one I tested.
No. RTP is a long-run statistical average across millions of rounds. Individual sessions can end far above or far below it — usually below. Play for entertainment, not income.