Slots: where a newcomer should start
With slots, of course. It is the biggest category and the simplest way in: press a button, the reels spin, the win is counted automatically. Your free spins from code FREEGAMBLE live here too, on Book of Dead.
The main things to look at before you play are the variance and the RTP in the rules of the specific slot. Low variance gives frequent small payouts and a steady session, which is handy for clearing a bonus. High variance brings long dead stretches but big potential. The same 96% return feels completely different depending on the volatility behind it. So the advice is simple: a newcomer has an easier time starting on medium variance and moving to high once it is clear how the bankroll behaves.
Live casino: when you want a real dealer, not an algorithm
Live is streaming video from a real studio: an actual person spins the roulette wheel, deals the cards in blackjack, runs a game show. The result is decided physically, in front of you, not by a random number generator. That atmosphere, and the trust in a process you can see, is exactly why people love the section.
There is a catch. Live runs in real time, the table sets the pace, not you, and you cannot sit on a bet for long. Minimum stakes here are usually higher than on slots, and table games count only partly toward bonus wagering - sometimes just 10%. So live blackjack is a poor fit for clearing a wagering requirement, but a great one for a quiet evening with a dealer.
Crash games: fast adrenaline with one exit button
Crash is the youngest and the most nerve-wracking format. The multiplier climbs in front of you: 1.2x, 1.8x, 2.5x - and the round can drop at any moment. You have one job: cash out before the curve collapses. Take it at 2x and you double your stake. Hesitate and you lose the lot.
Sounds simple, and that is the trap. Crash hooks you fast precisely on speed: rounds last seconds, and it is easy to lose more in half an hour than you planned for the whole evening. This is where discipline matters most - a session limit set in advance and a fixed cash-out multiplier. No irony here: this is the one case where responsible-play rules count for more than any strategy.