Stake
#1Stake is the operator that other crypto casinos are measured against. The catalogue runs into the thousands across slots, live dealer, and the studio's own Originals (Crash, Plinko, Mines, Dice, Limbo are the in-house references).
Three-second settlement, no L2 needed
XRP is the quiet alternative for players who want sub-five-second settlement and pennies-per-transaction fees without dealing with a Layer 2. The XRP Ledger has been live for over a decade and the casino-side integration is straightforward, which is why we see XRP support spread quickly to operators that previously held out on it. The downside is liquidity: if you withdraw a large amount of XRP and want to exit to fiat, your exchange options are narrower than they are for BTC or ETH. We score operators on whether they accept XRP destination tags correctly (a surprising number get this wrong), and whether their hot wallets are sized to handle five-figure withdrawals without delay.
Stake is the operator that other crypto casinos are measured against. The catalogue runs into the thousands across slots, live dealer, and the studio's own Originals (Crash, Plinko, Mines, Dice, Limbo are the in-house references).
BC.Game competes with Stake directly on catalogue breadth and crypto-asset support — the supported-coin list is one of the longest in the industry, reaching well beyond the standard BTC/ETH/SOL/USDT four into long-tail altcoins, meme coins, and chain-specific assets. The bonus structure leans heavier on recurring promotions (daily wheel, lucky spin, tier-up rewards) than on a single fat welcome match, which suits players who plan to stick around for a while.
JustBit sits in the mainstream tier with no obvious deficiencies and no standout feature — which is itself a useful position. Catalogue is broad, bonus structure is standard, payout times are mainstream-fast, and the crypto support list is among the longer ones on the market.
XRP at crypto casinos is shaped by the asset's specific design: deterministic 3-5 second settlement, fixed transaction fees (~$0.0002), and a centralized validator set that produces consistent throughput. The operational behavior is closer to Solana than to Bitcoin — deposits credit in seconds, withdrawals settle in seconds, and the fee math is effectively zero. The trade-off: XRP's market position has been controversial (the SEC vs Ripple litigation cast a long shadow over US-facing operators), and a meaningful subset of US-friendly casinos either don't accept XRP or applied geographic restrictions.
The post-litigation operational reality is that XRP support at crypto casinos has steadily expanded since 2023. Major crypto-native operators (Stake, BC.Game, Shuffle, Rollbit) accept XRP as a standard deposit option. Operators that emphasize US-facing acquisition still sometimes hedge on XRP support due to lingering regulatory uncertainty. The pattern that holds across the industry: if you can find a crypto casino that takes XRP, the deposit/withdrawal UX is excellent.
The 'destination tag' (memo) field is the structural detail XRP players need to handle correctly. XRP transfers to exchanges and operators usually require both an address AND a destination tag — the tag identifies which user account the deposit belongs to. Sending XRP without the required tag (or with the wrong tag) doesn't lose the funds, but it can require operator-side manual reconciliation that delays credit by hours or days. Reputable operators warn clearly about the destination tag requirement; sloppy ones bury it in fine print.
Operational fields that determine whether a XRP deposit credits cleanly and a withdrawal lands on time.
Failure modes that show up at scale across operators.
XRP finality is 3-5 seconds. Most operators credit XRP deposits within 30-60 seconds of the on-ledger transaction confirming, assuming the destination tag is correct. Wrong-tag deposits can take hours of support intervention to resolve.
Architecture difference. Bitcoin uses a separate deposit address per user (the operator generates a unique address per account). XRP transactions are usually routed to a single operator address with a destination tag identifying the user — saves the operator from managing thousands of separate XRP addresses.
Yes — assuming the operator processes the withdrawal promptly, XRP arrival in your destination wallet is 3-5 seconds after the on-ledger transaction broadcasts. Operator-side internal review for VIP-tier amounts is the bottleneck; XRP network speed is not.
Yes — Ledger and Trezor both support XRP. The destination tag is handled by the sending wallet UI; confirm the tag is set correctly before signing the transaction.
Most-played slots at XRP casinos — none of these care which coin you bet, but operator availability differs.
The bonus categories most relevant to crypto deposits.