Sic Bo | DG真人
Sic Bo uses three dice with multiple payout types and fast rounds.
Start with Big/Small, then explore specific totals and triples.
Stake control is more important than prediction.
Rules | Three-dice basics
Three dice are rolled to determine the outcome.
Common bets include Big/Small, Odd/Even, specific totals, and triples.
Big is 11–17, Small is 4–10. Triples usually lose on Big/Small.
With many combinations, payouts vary widely and volatility is higher.
Totals range from 3 to 18; extreme totals are harder to hit.
Sic Bo is fast-paced, so discipline matters more than variety.
Common bets and payouts
Sic Bo has varied odds. Typical options are shown below.
Set a stake limit before playing to control swings.
| Bet | Payout | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Big/Small | 1:1 | Triples usually lose |
| Odd/Even | 1:1 | Triples lose |
| Specific Total | 6:1 to 50:1 | Varies by total |
| Triple | 150:1 or 180:1 | All three dice same |
| Any Double | 8:1 | Any two dice same |
Tutorial | Entry rhythm
Big/Small is the easiest entry due to balanced probability.
Odd/Even can be used as a side option but loses on triples.
Totals and triples are high payout but should be small stakes.
If you play totals, stick to one or two favorites instead of spreading too wide.
Keep the bet menu simple at first to avoid overloading decisions.
Layout | Reading the betting zones
Sic Bo tables separate Big/Small, Odd/Even, totals, doubles, and triples.
Big/Small and Odd/Even are stable entry zones.
Totals and triples are high volatility and should stay small.
Doubles sit between, useful as a side bet rather than a main stake.
Know the zones first so your pace stays clean.
Flow | From calm to controlled
Observe a few rolls, then enter with a fixed unit size.
Use Big/Small as your anchor and totals as a light add-on.
If two or three losses stack, step back and reset.
Sic Bo is fast. Your discipline decides your outcome more than any pick.
Exit rules protect you more than any lucky streak.
Strategy | Stake distribution
Volatility is high, so distribute stakes and avoid chasing losses.
Use Big/Small as a main stake and add a small total side bet.
Set session limits and step back after losing streaks.
Strategy here is about reducing emotional bets.
Keep your approach simple so the rhythm stays readable.
Tempo | Discipline over excitement
Sic Bo can feel wild, but calm structure keeps it playable.
Fixed unit sizing makes the swings manageable.
Avoid reacting to every roll. Follow your plan instead.
Short sessions are better than chasing long streaks.
Session Plan | Control the swings
Start with an observe phase to read basic rhythm.
Enter with a fixed unit and keep your menu simple.
Exit on stop-win or stop-loss to protect your pace.
Return only when your decision-making is stable again.
Common Mistakes | High odds traps
Chasing triples or rare totals too often creates heavy swings.
Big wins followed by large stake jumps usually erase gains fast.
Ignoring the stability of Big/Small leads to over-volatility.
Betting too many totals at once makes results harder to track.
Bankroll | Stay within limits
Start with small units and only scale after stable rhythm.
Set clear stop-loss and stop-win thresholds.
Sic Bo is best played in short, focused sessions.
Decide your exit rule before you begin and keep it fixed.
Example | Main + side bets
Allocate 80% to Big/Small and 20% to a chosen total.
Pause after three consecutive main losses to reset rhythm.
If two triples appear in a short window, return to simple bets.
When the main bet wins twice, keep the same size instead of scaling up.
FAQ
Q: Is Sic Bo purely luck?\nA: Outcomes are random, but risk control matters.
Q: Should I chase triples?\nA: Triples are high risk and best kept small.
Q: What if Big/Small loses multiple rounds?\nA: Reduce size or pause to reset.
Q: How many totals should I play?\nA: One or two is enough for control.
Key Takeaways
- Sic Bo is high volatility and needs discipline
- Big/Small is the cleanest entry
- Totals and triples are small-stake plays
- Pause when loss streaks appear
- No strategy guarantees results
- Session limits keep swings manageable
EEAT
Author: Table game rules researcher / practical player
Reviewer: Rules & gameplay verification
Updated: 2026-01-20
Ready to enter the table?
Guides help you read the rhythm. Real feel comes from play.