Crazy Time's overall RTP is 96.08%, but that headline figure is misleading without the breakdown. It ranges from 94.33% on Pachinko to 96.08% on number 1 — a difference of 1.75 percentage points that translates to ₹1,750 per ₹1,00,000 wagered. Here is the real mathematics: what the house keeps on every segment, what it means for your bankroll and how Crazy Time compares to blackjack, roulette and slots. Check the live data to see how these probabilities are playing out in the current session, or go straight to strategy to put these numbers to work.
Each betting option in Crazy Time has its own RTP and house edge. The table shows the theoretical figures confirmed by Evolution Gaming:
| Segment | Segs/54 | Frequency | Payout | RTP | House Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number 1 | 21 | 38.89% | 1:1 | 96.08% | 3.92% |
| Number 2 | 13 | 24.07% | 2:1 | 95.95% | 4.05% |
| Number 5 | 7 | 12.96% | 5:1 | 95.78% | 4.22% |
| Number 10 | 4 | 7.41% | 10:1 | 95.73% | 4.27% |
| Coin Flip | 4 | 7.41% | Variable | 95.70% | 4.30% |
| Cash Hunt | 2 | 3.70% | Variable | 95.27% | 4.73% |
| Crazy Time | 1 | 1.85% | Variable | 94.41% | 5.59% |
| Pachinko | 2 | 3.70% | Variable | 94.33% | 5.67% |
Number 1 offers the best mathematical return (96.08%): out of every ₹10,000 wagered, the house retains ₹392 on average over the long term. Pachinko has the worst (94.33%): the house retains ₹567 per ₹10,000. The maximum gap between the best and worst segment is 1.75 percentage points — or ₹1,750 per ₹1,00,000 wagered. Numbers deliver better RTP but low, predictable payouts. Bonuses deliver worse RTP but carry multiplier potential that can transform an entire session in a single spin.
The House Edge is the casino's mathematical advantage on every bet. It is calculated directly: 100% minus the RTP. For number 1: 100% − 96.08% = 3.92%. For Pachinko: 100% − 94.33% = 5.67%. There is no segment in Crazy Time where the player holds a mathematical edge — all 8 betting options carry negative Expected Value. The house wins over the long run on every single option, without exception.
In practical terms: if you wager a cumulative ₹1,00,000 on number 1 across multiple sessions, your expected loss is ₹3,920 (3.92%). If you wager ₹1,00,000 on Pachinko, your expected loss rises to ₹5,670. The difference between the best and worst segment is ₹1,750 per ₹1,00,000 — which looks small round by round, but accumulates across hundreds of spins. For the detailed EV table showing the value per ₹1 wagered on each segment, check the statistics page.
In the short term, anything can happen. You could bet ₹10,000 on number 1 and win ₹30,000 in 20 minutes. Or lose it all in 10 spins. The house edge only materialises over the long run — thousands of spins, millions of players. In an individual session of 50–100 rounds, variance dominates over mathematics. RTP is a statistical promise at the collective scale, not a guarantee for your individual session.
Volatility measures how much your results can deviate from the theoretical RTP in a real session. High volatility means your wins and losses fluctuate sharply — you can lose fast or win big. Low volatility means more predictable results, closer to the RTP within each session.
If you bet only on numbers 1 and 2, you cover 63% of the wheel (34 of 54 segments) at low volatility. Your bankroll stays relatively stable, declining gradually at the pace of the house edge (~4%). In a 100-round test, typical results range between −15% and +10%. If you bet only on bonuses, you cover 17% of the wheel at extreme volatility — you might go 20 spins without winning anything, but a single Pachinko with chained DOUBLEs or a Cash Hunt with a 50× Top Slot can multiply your bankroll by 50.
Crazy Time as a complete game is classified as HIGH volatility. The 96.08% RTP only converges with reality across millions of global spins. In your individual session of 50–100 rounds, you might finish at +100% or −80% without that contradicting the game's mathematics in any way. Your risk profile determines which mix of bets suits you — and that is exactly what we cover in the 3 strategies by risk profile.
How does Crazy Time stack up against other casino games? The table compares RTP and house edge across the most popular categories:
| Game | RTP | House Edge | Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blackjack (optimal) | 99.50% | 0.50% | Excellent |
| Baccarat | 98.94% | 1.06% | Excellent |
| European Roulette | 97.30% | 2.70% | Good |
| Crazy Time (No.1) | 96.08% | 3.92% | Mid |
| Slots (typical range) | 94–97% | 3–6% | Mid |
| American Roulette | 94.74% | 5.26% | Low |
| Keno | 75–95% | 5–25% | Low |
At 96.08%, Crazy Time sits in the mid range of casino games — below blackjack (with optimal strategy: 99.50%) and baccarat (98.94%), but above American roulette (94.74%) and most slots. The key difference: blackjack and baccarat don't offer 25,000× multipliers. Crazy Time compensates for its slightly higher house edge with prize potential that no traditional table game can match. It's a deliberate trade-off: more house advantage in exchange for moments that can pay thousands of times your stake in a single round.
Now that you understand the mathematics behind every spin — RTP by segment, house edge in rupees and volatility by bet type — you can select the segments that align with your risk profile. Our strategy section offers 3 tested approaches with 100-round data tests built on exactly these figures. The RTP doesn't change, but how you use it does.
Want to put it into practice? Start with the demo to test your approach without risk, or choose a casino and deposit instantly via UPI. The wheel spins 24/7 — and now you know exactly what's behind every number and every bonus.