Rainbet Table Games: Cards and Wheels
Updated on July 2, 2026 by the editorial team
Rainbet keeps a full spread of table games next to its 10,000-plus slots, so blackjack, roulette, baccarat and casino poker all sit in one lobby. This page runs through what you can actually play, how the house edge works on each format, which titles return the most, and the steps to move from browsing to a real-money seat.
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What sits in the table games lobby
Open the table section and the choice splits into a few clear families. Card games lead the way. You get blackjack in several rule sets, baccarat with its punto-banco betting slip, and casino versions of poker such as Caribbean Stud and Three Card. Each carries its own rhythm, so a blackjack regular and a baccarat regular rarely play the same way.
Wheel games form the second group. European roulette, French roulette and American roulette each carry a different pocket count, and that single detail changes your odds more than any betting system. The European wheel holds 37 pockets, the American wheel adds a second zero for 38, and the French layout adds player-friendly rules on top of the European wheel. Dice and speciality titles round things off: sic bo, craps and a handful of game-show style wheels that borrow the studio format from live TV.
Two build types share the same menu. RNG tables run on certified software from studios like BGaming, Yggdrasil, Thunderkick, Spinomenal and Platipus, so a hand resolves the instant you tap and you set your own tempo. Live tables stream a real dealer from a studio, with human timing, real cards or a physical wheel, and a chat box for talking to the croupier. Beginners often start on RNG blackjack to learn the moves without a clock, then graduate to a live seat.
Stake ranges differ across the two builds. RNG tables tend to open lower, sometimes from a few pence a hand, which suits practice runs. Live tables usually set higher floors and add VIP rooms with larger ceilings. If you want to compare the wider catalogue, the all games hub lists every category side by side.
How the house edge actually works
Every table game keeps a small mathematical margin for the casino. That margin is the house edge, and it tells you the long-run cost of each £100 you stake. Blackjack played with correct strategy sits near the bottom of the range. Roulette climbs depending on the wheel. Some side bets and speciality tables run far higher, sometimes past 10%.
Here is the part players miss. The house edge is a long-term average, not a prediction for your session. Over thousands of hands the numbers settle toward the printed figure. Over twenty hands, variance rules and short winning streaks are completely normal. This is exactly why a low-edge game can still hand you a losing night and a high-edge game can still pay out big in the short run.
Rule tweaks move the edge in ways that are easy to overlook. A blackjack table paying 3:2 on a natural is far kinder than one paying 6:5, and that one line on the felt can quadruple the house margin. A roulette wheel with a single zero costs you roughly half of what a double-zero wheel does. Baccarat charges a 5% commission on winning Banker bets, which is already built into its edge. Read the rules panel before you sit, because two tables with the same name can price your bets very differently.
Bankroll pacing matters as much as the maths. Pick a session budget, set a stake that lets you ride out cold runs, and treat the house edge as the price of the entertainment rather than a target to beat. No betting system erases it. Doubling after a loss feels clever but only shortens the road to the table limit.
Return rates across the main tables
RTP is the mirror image of the house edge: a 99% RTP means a 1% edge. The figures below reflect standard rules and optimal play where strategy applies. Side bets and non-standard variants shift these numbers, usually against you.
| Table game | Typical RTP | House edge | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blackjack (basic strategy) | 99.5% | ~0.5% | Depends on decks and 3:2 payout |
| Baccarat (Banker bet) | 98.9% | ~1.06% | 5% commission applies on wins |
| French roulette (La Partage) | 98.6% | ~1.35% | Half back on even-money bets at zero |
| European roulette | 97.3% | ~2.70% | Single zero pocket |
| Craps (pass line) | 98.6% | ~1.41% | Odds bets lower it further |
| American roulette | 94.7% | ~5.26% | Double zero raises the cost |
Read the table as a shopping list. Banker in baccarat and a single-zero wheel give you the closest thing to a fair fight; the double-zero wheel roughly doubles your cost for the same spin. Blackjack tops the list, but only if you follow basic strategy and the table pays 3:2, so those two conditions are worth checking before you commit chips.
Side bets are the quiet drain. A blackjack Perfect Pairs wager or a baccarat Dragon Bonus can run a double-digit edge while the base game stays cheap, so they cost far more than the main bet you sat down for. If you are chasing wagering on the welcome bonus, check the contribution rate first, because most table games count for only a fraction of each stake toward rollover, and some are excluded entirely.
Getting to a real-money seat
Moving from demo chips to a funded table takes a few minutes. The order matters, especially the bonus opt-in, which you cannot add after a deposit has landed.
- Create your account through registration and confirm your email address.
- Verify your identity. Rainbet asks for a passport or driving licence, a recent utility bill for proof of address, and proof of payment for your deposit method. Checks usually clear within 24 hours.
- Fund the balance. The minimum deposit is £10, though you need £20 to activate the welcome offer. Payment options sit in the payments section.
- Choose your table. Filter by blackjack, roulette or baccarat, then pick an RNG or live version to match your pace.
- Set the stake within the table limits and place your bet. Live tables run to the dealer's timer, so lock your chips before the window closes.
The welcome package is 100% up to £1,000 + 100 FS. Wagering runs at x40 on the bonus, with a 7-day window to clear it, and table games typically contribute at a reduced rate. Try a few demo rounds before you switch to cash, especially on live blackjack, where the timer punishes hesitation and there is no undo on a placed bet.
Withdrawals follow the same account you deposited with. The minimum cash-out is £20, daily payouts cap at £4,000 with a £30,000 monthly ceiling, and crypto usually settles within 24 hours while Visa and Mastercard take 1 to 3 business days. See the full breakdown on withdrawal times.
Common questions about Rainbet table games
Which table game has the lowest house edge?
Blackjack played with correct basic strategy sits lowest, around a 0.5% edge on a 3:2 table with favourable rules. Baccarat's Banker bet and single-zero roulette with the La Partage rule follow close behind.
Can I play table games on my phone?
Yes. Both RNG and live tables run in the browser on mobile, and the layouts rescale for a portrait screen. The mobile casino page covers device support and live-dealer performance in more detail.
Do table games count toward the welcome bonus wagering?
Usually only partly. The bonus carries x40 wagering over 7 days, and most table games contribute at a lower percentage than slots. Check the specific contribution rate in the bonus terms before you plan your play.
What is the difference between RNG and live tables?
RNG tables use certified software from studios such as BGaming and Yggdrasil, so hands resolve instantly and you set your own pace. Live tables stream a real dealer in real time with a physical wheel or shoe, which adds atmosphere but runs to a fixed timer.
Is Rainbet licensed to offer these games?
Rainbet operates under a licence from the Anjouan Gaming Authority. That licence covers the operator's game fairness and player-account standards across the table catalogue.
