First Person Super Sic Bo Review
Evolution built its reputation on live dealer games, and First Person Super Sic Bo is the studio's attempt to bring that experience into a solo, RNG-driven format. The core concept is straightforward: take the multiplier-heavy Super Sic Bo live table and repackage it for players who prefer to set their own pace without a live stream or a dealer on screen.
The honest caveat upfront — virtually every spec for this title is unpublished. Evolution has not released an official RTP, volatility rating, max win figure, or bet range for First Person Super Sic Bo through any verified public channel. That makes this review necessarily different from a standard spec-driven analysis. What we can do is examine what the format itself implies, what Evolution's First Person series typically delivers, and whether this title makes sense for the type of player it's targeting.
What First Person Super Sic Bo Actually Is
Evolution's First Person series exists as a bridge between the studio's live casino tables and the traditional RNG slot or table-game environment. First Person Super Sic Bo takes the Super Sic Bo live game — a three-dice wagering format where random multipliers are applied to select bet spots before each roll — and renders it as a standalone RNG title. There's no live dealer, no stream latency, and no waiting for other players at the table.
Sic Bo itself is a Chinese dice game in which players bet on the outcome of three dice rolled simultaneously. Super Sic Bo adds Evolution's signature random multiplier mechanic on top of the standard bet types, meaning certain positions on the betting grid are assigned multiplied payouts before the dice roll. That multiplier layer is what separates Super Sic Bo from standard Sic Bo and is the primary source of variance in any session.
The First Person wrapper gives solo players full control over pace and bet timing. It's the same reason Evolution released First Person versions of Blackjack, Roulette, and Baccarat — the live tables have queue times and social dynamics that not every player wants. First Person Super Sic Bo strips those away.
RTP, Volatility, and Published Specs
Evolution has not published an official RTP, volatility classification, max win, or bet range for First Person Super Sic Bo through any verified source available at the time of this review. This is worth stating once, clearly, and then moving past it — it doesn't indicate a problem with the game itself, but it does mean the usual analytical framework doesn't apply here.
For context, the live Super Sic Bo game has a published RTP that varies by bet type, as is standard in Sic Bo — different positions on the board carry different house edges. The First Person RNG version may follow a similar structure, but without official documentation, any specific figure would be speculation. Evolution's First Person Blackjack, by comparison, carries a published RTP above 99% because it follows fixed blackjack strategy math. Sic Bo's multi-bet structure makes a single RTP figure less straightforward to publish, which may partly explain the gap.
What this means practically: players who require a confirmed RTP before committing real money will find First Person Super Sic Bo difficult to evaluate on that basis alone. The game is better suited to players already familiar with the live Super Sic Bo format who understand the bet-type variance from direct experience.
How the Betting Grid Works
Sic Bo's betting grid is more complex than a standard slot paytable. Players choose from a range of bet types before each roll: totals (the sum of all three dice), specific doubles, specific triples, small or big bets, and combination bets. Each bet type carries a different base payout and a different probability of hitting.
In the Super Sic Bo format, Evolution's multiplier mechanic activates before the dice roll. A selection of bet spots on the grid receives randomly assigned multipliers — these can range from modest boosts to significantly elevated payouts depending on the live game's documented multiplier range. The First Person version replicates this mechanic in RNG form, meaning the multiplier assignment and dice roll are both determined by a certified random number generator rather than physical dice and a live studio draw.
For players moving from the live table to the First Person version, the core betting decisions are identical. The difference is entirely in delivery: no live video, no dealer interaction, and the ability to pause or exit mid-session without holding up a table. The multiplier mechanic, which is the main reason most players seek out Super Sic Bo over standard Sic Bo in the first place, carries over into this format.
First Person Format vs. Live Table
Evolution's First Person titles are not direct replacements for their live counterparts — they're a different use case. The live Super Sic Bo table has a social dimension, a real-time energy, and a shared experience with other players that the First Person version doesn't attempt to replicate. What the First Person format offers instead is accessibility and pace control.
One practical advantage is the Go Live button that Evolution typically includes in its First Person titles. This allows a player to jump directly from the RNG version into the live Super Sic Bo table with their current bet configuration, functioning as an on-ramp rather than a full substitute. Whether that feature is present and functional in First Person Super Sic Bo specifically is worth confirming at your casino of choice, as implementation can vary by operator.
From a pure value standpoint, the First Person format is also often available at lower minimum bet thresholds than the live table, though without published bet range data for this title that remains unconfirmed. Players who find live Sic Bo tables intimidating or who want to learn the bet types before committing to a live session have a reasonable case for starting here.
Who This Title Is Best For
First Person Super Sic Bo is a narrow-audience product, and that's not a criticism — it's just an accurate description. The primary audience is players who already play Super Sic Bo on Evolution's live tables and want a solo alternative for sessions where pace or availability is a factor. The game doesn't try to convert slot players into Sic Bo players; the betting grid is complex enough that prior familiarity helps considerably.
A secondary audience is players who are curious about Sic Bo but find live tables socially pressured. The First Person format removes the dealer interaction and the pace of a shared table, making it a lower-stakes environment to learn the bet types and understand how the multiplier system affects different positions on the grid.
Slot players looking for a straightforward spin-and-win experience will find First Person Super Sic Bo a poor match. The game requires active betting decisions each round, carries no traditional paylines or reel structure, and doesn't function like a slot in any mechanical sense beyond being RNG-powered. The crossover appeal to that audience is limited.
Final Verdict
First Person Super Sic Bo does what Evolution's First Person series is designed to do: it makes a live casino format available in a solo, self-paced environment. The execution is competent, and the core Super Sic Bo mechanic — particularly the random multiplier system — is the same reason the live table has sustained popularity across Evolution's casino partners.
The lack of published specs is the one factor that complicates a clean recommendation. Evolution's live Super Sic Bo has documented multiplier ranges and bet-type RTPs that players can reference; the First Person version currently doesn't have equivalent public documentation. That gap matters more for analytical players than for casual ones.
For the right player — someone who knows Super Sic Bo and wants a solo format — this title is a solid option. For everyone else, the spec gap and the complexity of the betting grid make it harder to justify over more transparently documented alternatives in Evolution's own First Person lineup.
- +Solo, self-paced version of a popular live casino format
- +Retains the Super Sic Bo multiplier mechanic in RNG form
- +Removes live table pressure for players learning Sic Bo bet types
- +Typically includes a Go Live button to transition to the live table
- -No published RTP, max win, or volatility data available
- -Complex betting grid makes it unsuitable for players new to Sic Bo
- -Not a slot in any traditional sense — limited crossover appeal for reel-game players
Best for
First Person Super Sic Bo fills a specific gap: it gives dice-game enthusiasts a way to play Super Sic Bo on their own schedule without a live table. The near-total absence of published specs is a genuine obstacle for analytical players, though it's not unusual for Evolution's RNG adaptations. If you already enjoy the live version, the solo format is a reasonable alternative. If you're new to Sic Bo entirely, the lack of transparency makes it harder to benchmark.




