Reference

Live Sic Bo Tables Made Clear

Open your account and step into a Live Sic Bo room where the three dice, betting board, and result history stay in front of you.

Three DiceSmall and BigResult HistoryLive Dealer
k75s30 Live Sic Bo Tables Made Clear
k75s30 How the Sic Bo room works

How the Sic Bo room works

Our Sic Bo rooms are built around the dealer's throw, the timer, and the board that shows where each chip sits. You can read the total, pair, and triple spots before the dealer closes betting, then watch the dice land and the result settle in the history strip. When one table fills or slows down, you can move to another live room

and keep the same rule set.

TABLE SPOTS

Three corners of the lobby

These are the parts that make our Live Sic Bo rooms easy to read at a glance.

Small and Big at a glance
Dealer pace you can follow
Move to another room
k75s30 mobile gaming
MOBILE TABLES

Live Sic Bo on your phone

Live Sic Bo works well on phone screens because the board stays readable and the chip row sits close to your thumb.

Portrait Mode
Thumb Reach
Result Strip
Landscape View
k75s30 mobile gaming
Google Play App Store
HELP ON TABLE

Help during Sic Bo sessions

If something feels unclear during a round, we focus on the live table first.

Board reading help If you are unsure which chip covers a total, pair, or triple, we can…
Round timing help If your stake looks late, we check the table timer and the round log…
Stream check If the video freezes, we can help you reload the room, confirm the table…
TABLE SIGNALS

What we show on each table

Our Live Sic Bo rooms are set up to show the parts that matter before you place a chip.

Visible betting zones

We keep the board labels plain, so you can see where Small, Big, pairs, and triples sit before you join the room. That makes the live dice flow easier to follow round by round.

Round history strip

Past results stay on screen after each throw, letting you compare the latest dice outcome with the previous rounds without leaving the table.

Table IDs shown

Each room carries a clear table ID and studio label, so you know exactly which Sic Bo stream you are sitting with before the betting window closes.

Camera on the throw

The dealer camera frames the table and dice tray so the roll is visible, not hidden behind extra graphics. That keeps the action easy to check as the result lands.

Rule set per room

Every room shows the same core Sic Bo rules, but the pacing can differ from table to table. You can choose the speed that matches how you like to read the board.

Local access check

When access or eligibility is discussed, it depends on local law and is available where local law permits. We keep that line clear before you open the room.

How our Sic Bo room differs

A good Sic Bo lobby should help you read the board quickly, not bury the table under extra clutter.

Board readability
On our table pages, the betting board stays readable beside the stream. Some Sic Bo rooms shrink the chip zone too far on mobile, which makes it harder to track your next move.
Round timing
We show the closing point before the throw, so you know exactly when betting ends. Other rooms sometimes hide that moment until the dealer has already moved on.
Result history
Past dice results stay visible after each round. That gives you a quick way to follow streaks and totals without opening a separate screen.
Table switching
If one room fills up or feels fast, you can move to another Sic Bo table and keep the same rule set. In cluttered lobbies, that switch is harder to do cleanly.
Camera angle
Our live view keeps the dice tray and betting surface in frame. That makes the throw easier to read than rooms that focus too tightly on the dealer.
Board types
You will find tables with simple board layouts and others with more side spots, so you can choose the amount of detail you want around each round.
Access check
We keep the access note visible, and availability depends on local law. That avoids confusion when you open a room from a region where the game cannot be shown.

Live Sic Bo table markers

These are the parts you see first in our Sic Bo rooms: the three dice, the betting board, the result strip, and the dealer camera.

Three dice

The round starts with three dice in view, so you can follow every result from the table rather than from a detached animation. That is the core of the Sic Bo format.

Small and Big

The main low and high bets stay easy to spot on the board, which helps when you want a simple call before the dealer closes the window.

Triple spots

Triple boxes sit close to the main totals, so you can take a quicker look at the higher-risk side of the board without losing the rest of the layout.

Result strip

A live history row keeps the most recent dice outcomes on screen, letting you compare the last throw with the one before it while the room stays active.

Dealer camera

The camera frames the table and cup area clearly, so you can watch the throw and the reveal without extra clutter around the action.

Table timer

A visible timer marks the betting window on each round, which gives you a clean cue for when to place a chip and when to wait for the next throw.

Common Sic Bo questions

If you are new to Sic Bo, the room can feel busy at first because the dealer, timer, and betting board move together. These questions focus on the round flow you will see on our tables: how the dice are rolled, which spots stay visible, how history works, and what to expect when you move between rooms.

The dealer opens the betting window, the board lights up, and you place chips on totals, pairs, or triples before the timer closes. After that, the three dice are shown and the result settles on the board.

You will usually see Small, Big, specific totals, pairs, and triple spots on the board. The exact layout can vary by room, so it helps to read the table labels before the next throw.

Yes. Our tables keep a history strip beside the live view, so you can compare the most recent dice outcome with earlier rounds without leaving the room or opening a separate page.

Yes. The board stays readable on smaller screens, and portrait view keeps the main betting zones close to your thumb. If you want more space, landscape gives the dealer view a wider frame.

If the timer closes before your chip lands, the stake moves to the next round or is not accepted, depending on the table state. The round log helps you confirm what happened.

Yes. If one room feels too fast or too full, you can switch to another Sic Bo table and keep the same core rules. That helps when you want a different pace without relearning the board.

Access depends on local law and is available where local law permits. If a room is not shown in your region, that is a location rule, not a table problem.