Most online craps titles give you a table and leave you to figure the rest out yourself. Go Craps by Play’n GO goes further, with a strategy saving system, a Pro mode for configuring dice behaviour, and preset betting strategies built in from the start, making this one of the more feature-complete digital craps experiences available in free play.
Go Craps runs a full craps table covering every standard bet type. Pass Line and Don’t Pass Bar handle the fundamental multi-roll wagers. Come and Don’t Come extend that logic to subsequent rolls once a point is established. The Field pays on single-roll outcomes (2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, 12), with 2 paying double. Place bets sit on all six point numbers (4, 5, Six, 8, Nine, 10). Hardways cover the four even numbers hit as matching pairs, paying 9:1 on 6 and 8, and 7:1 on 4 and 10. Proposition bets occupy the right side of the table: Any Seven at 4:1, Any Craps at 7:1, and Horn Bet positions paying 15:1 or 30:1 depending on the outcome. Total bet range is 0.50 to 5,000.00.
A female-voiced dealer calls each roll and announces outcomes, giving the session a lounge ambience that suits the game well. The background music sits comfortably behind the action without competing with it, a relaxed lounge feel that adds to the atmosphere rather than demanding attention.
Four preset betting strategies are available from the Strategies panel: World, Across, Inside, and Iron Cross. Each pre-configures a specific spread of bets that craps players will recognise as established approaches to covering the table. The Iron Cross, for example, covers the Field plus Place bets on 5, Six, and Eight, meaning only a 7 loses, which is why it is a popular choice for players who want broad coverage without spreading too thin. Selecting a preset loads that bet configuration instantly rather than requiring manual placement of each chip.
Beyond the presets, three custom slots are available. Any table state configured via the Pro mode can be saved to a custom slot and recalled in future sessions, meaning regular players can store their preferred bet spreads and reload them without rebuilding from scratch each time. Odds and Come bets are not saved with strategies and need to be placed manually each session.
Go Craps plays across two phases. The Come Out roll is the opening roll of a new round, with the puck showing OFF. A roll of 7 or 11 wins Pass Line bets immediately. A roll of 2, 3, or 12 (craps) loses them. Any other number becomes the Point, the puck flips to ON, and the Point phase begins. In the Point phase, the shooter keeps rolling until they hit the Point number again (Pass Line wins) or roll a 7 (Pass Line loses). This two-phase structure is what gives craps its rhythm. The Come Out establishes the target, and the Point phase plays it out.
The RTP in craps is not a single figure, as it varies entirely by which bets are placed. Pass Line carries a house edge of around 1.41%, making it one of the best bets in the casino. At the other extreme, single-roll propositions like Any Seven sit at 83.33% RTP. The game’s published range is 83.33%–99.69%. Players who stick to Pass Line, Don’t Pass, and odds bets operate at the top end of that range. Players who load up on proposition bets operate at the bottom. The demo is a practical way to understand this relationship before playing for real.
Pro mode opens two panels: Hardways and Dice Frequency. The Hardways panel shows the current bet amounts on each of the four hardway numbers. The Dice Frequency panel is the more unusual addition. Sliders allow adjustment of the relative weighting of each die face from 0 to 2. This does not change the fundamental randomness of the game, but it does let players who have studied dice influencing theory configure the simulation to model specific bias scenarios, or simply to explore how shifting frequency assumptions would affect expected outcomes across different bet types.
For players new to craps, Pro mode is less immediately useful as a live tool and more valuable as a way to understand why certain bets perform differently. As one example of how it could be used: craps mathematics tells us that 7 is the most frequently rolled number, and Place bets lose when 7 lands. Adjusting the 7-face slider upward and observing how that shifts expected outcomes across different bet types makes that mathematical relationship tangible in a way that reading about it does not.
The My Bets panel controls what happens to each individual bet after a roll resolves. Options per bet are: take out winnings automatically, keep the bet in place, or set a limit. This removes the need to manually manage each position after every roll, which matters in longer sessions where multiple bets are running simultaneously. A Double Bet button is also available, and bets can be toggled off without removal, useful for sitting out a roll without losing a configured bet position.