All ic7 game Games
106+ titles across seven categories — blockbuster slots from Pragmatic Play and PG Soft, live dealer tables streamed in HD by Evolution, Teen Patti and Andar Bahar with the Indian rules you already know, second-long crash rounds, JILI fishing arcades, number draws and sports-themed titles. Every game on this page publishes its RTP, its volatility rating and its minimum bet before you spend a rupee, because you should be able to choose with your eyes open. Filter by category, search by title or provider, and play from ₹5 a round.
Understanding The ic7 game Library
Seven categories, one wallet, and seven completely different experiences. The category you choose shapes your session far more than the individual title inside it does — the pace, the bankroll it demands and the kind of attention it asks of you all change the moment you move from a slot to a crash game. Here is an honest account of each one, including the parts that are easy to get wrong.
Slots — the biggest slice of the library
Roughly seventy of our titles are video slots, and they are where most players begin. The appeal is that there is nothing to learn: you set a stake, you tap spin, and a certified random number generator operated by the game studio settles the result. Pragmatic Play's tumbling-reel blockbusters like Gates of Olympus and Sweet Bonanza sit alongside PG Soft's Asian-themed hits such as Mahjong Ways and Fortune Mouse, and stakes commonly open around ₹5.
The pace is entirely yours to set — a spin resolves in about two seconds, but nothing forces you to take the next one. That makes slots comfortable for short, casual sessions. They suit players who want entertainment without decisions, and they are the safest place to learn how a real-money balance actually behaves over a few hundred rounds. What to watch: volatility. A high-volatility slot can run a long, quiet stretch with nothing meaningful landing, and players who mistake that for being "due" a win tend to raise their stake at precisely the wrong moment. Read the rating on the game page and match it to the size of your balance, not to your mood.
Live Casino — real dealers, in real time
Lightning Roulette, Crazy Time and the rest of the Evolution lobby are streamed in HD from a physical studio with a human dealer you can talk to. Nothing is simulated: you watch the wheel spin and the cards land on camera. The pace is deliberately human — a betting window opens, the dealer closes it, the round resolves — which makes this the calmest category we carry and the hardest one in which to burn through a balance without noticing.
Live tables suit players who want atmosphere and a slower rhythm, and who would rather trust their own eyes than a piece of software. What to watch: table minimums. They run wider here than anywhere else in the library, and it is genuinely easy to sit down at a table whose minimum stake is a large fraction of your session budget. Check it before you join, and treat the side bets with suspicion — they pay more precisely because they carry a bigger house edge.
Card Games — Teen Patti and Andar Bahar, the Indian heart of the library
This is the category Indian players come for, and we treat it accordingly. Teen Patti in its classic, Joker and Master variants, Andar Bahar, Dragon vs Tiger, speed baccarat and VIP blackjack — all with rule sets and table limits that will feel immediately familiar if you have ever played at a real table. The pace sits between live casino and slots: a hand takes under a minute, and you are asked to make real decisions inside it.
That is what sets card games apart. Your choices — when to continue, when to fold, how much to commit — genuinely change your expected result. Skill will not overcome the house edge, and anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something; but carelessness will widen it noticeably. This category suits disciplined, patient players who are willing to learn one variant properly rather than dabble in five. What to watch: side bets, which carry a materially higher house edge than the main game, and the temptation to stay in a hand you would never have entered. Decide your folding threshold before you sit down.
Crash & Instant — the fastest rounds we carry
Crash, Mines, Plinko X and HILO resolve in five to twenty seconds. A multiplier climbs and your entire job is to decide when to cash out. There is no paytable to study and no bonus round to trigger — there is one decision, made under time pressure, repeated as often as you allow it.
We would rather be plain about this: the speed is what makes the category risky. You can play two hundred crash rounds in the time a single live baccarat shoe finishes, and a balance that would comfortably last an hour on a slot can be gone in ten minutes here — not because the game is unfair, but because it lets you make decisions much faster than you can think about them. It suits experienced, disciplined players and almost nobody else. What to watch: use the auto cash-out feature without exception. Setting your exit multiplier before the round begins moves the decision out of the heat of a climbing curve and into a calm moment beforehand. Set a round limit too — fifty, a hundred — and stop there regardless of how it is going.
Fishing Arcades — the most hands-on games on the platform
Jackpot Fishing, Happy Fishing and Fishing Disco take their controls straight from arcade shooters. You aim a cannon, you fire, and every fish on screen carries a payout multiplier printed next to it. Bigger fish pay more and take more shots to land, and each shot costs you a stake. Rooms are separated by bet range, and sessions are designed to run long.
This is the category where your input most directly controls how your money is spent, which makes it genuinely engaging for players who find reels too passive. It suits people who want to be involved and who have the time for a proper sitting. What to watch: cannon power. It is a bet-size control disguised as a difficulty setting, and it is the single number most new players ignore. Firing a maxed-out cannon at small fish will drain a balance many times faster than picking your targets. And because these games have no natural round boundary, budget your time as carefully as your rupees — nothing in the game will ever stop you.
Lottery & Bingo — slow, cheap, low-pressure
Keno, iRich Bingo and Number King give you a number-picking rhythm you can keep running quietly alongside something else. You pick numbers or buy a card, a draw takes place on a timer, and matches pay according to a fixed table printed before you buy in. Entry costs are typically small, and nothing about the category demands a fast decision.
It suits casual players who want a game running without it demanding their full attention, and people who find the intensity of crash or the concentration of card games unappealing. What to watch: draw games are pure chance, and your number selection does not change your odds — a card of consecutive numbers and a card of scattered ones are worth exactly the same. Any "system" for picking numbers is superstition wearing a suit. The real risk here is the opposite of crash: because each draw is so cheap, it is very easy to play far more of them than you intended. Set a draw count, not just a budget.
Sports-Themed — familiar drama, casino mechanics
World Cup, Cricket War, Football Star and Basketball Star wrap the drama of sport around a casino mechanic. It matters that we say this clearly: this is not a sportsbook. You are not betting on the outcome of a real match. The result comes from the same certified engine that runs our slots and card games, and no amount of following cricket will change it.
The appeal is familiarity. If you follow a sport but have never opened a casino title, a game built around penalties, overs or a tournament run is a comfortable way in — the theme carries you while you learn the mechanic underneath, which is usually a slot or a card game in disguise. Read the paytable to find out which. Stakes typically open low, which makes this a reasonable first stop. What to watch: the narrative pull. A game built around a match is very good at persuading you to see it through to the end, so set your stop point before the first ball.
How To Read A Game Page
Every one of the 106+ detail pages on this site prints the same five numbers. Most players skim past them. They are, in fact, the only objective information you have about a game before you stake money on it — so here is exactly what each one does and does not tell you.
RTP — return to player
RTP is the theoretical percentage of all money wagered on a game that it returns to players over an extremely large number of rounds — typically calculated across millions of them. A 96% RTP means that, across that vast sample, the game pays back ₹96 for every ₹100 staked. The remaining ₹4 is the house edge, and it is how the game makes money.
What RTP is not is a forecast of your session. It says nothing about what happens in your next hundred spins, and a 96% RTP absolutely does not mean you will get ₹96 back from ₹100. Short-run results scatter enormously around the long-run average — that scatter is the entire reason anyone plays. Treat RTP as a fact about the game, useful for comparing two titles against each other, and never as a promise about your money. A higher RTP is genuinely better value over time; it is not a route to a guaranteed return, and it never overcomes the house edge.
Volatility — how the return is distributed
If RTP tells you how much a game gives back, volatility tells you how it gives it back. A high-volatility game holds its return in rare, heavy payouts, so most sessions are quiet and occasional ones are dramatic. A low-volatility game drips the same theoretical return out in small, frequent amounts. Two games can share an identical 96% RTP and feel like completely different products because of this one rating.
This is the number that should drive your choice, because it is the one that determines whether your balance survives long enough for you to enjoy the game. Match it to your bankroll and your session length, honestly.
| Volatility | What it means | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Frequent small payouts. Your balance moves gently and sessions feel steady, but big results are rare by design. | Beginners, small bankrolls, and anyone who wants a long session from a modest deposit. |
| Medium | A balance of the two — regular modest wins with the occasional larger one. The most common rating in the library. | Most players. This is the sensible default if you are unsure, and where we point complete beginners. |
| Medium–High | Noticeably longer quiet stretches, with heavier payouts when the game does land. | Players with a bankroll deep enough to absorb dry runs without changing their stake. |
| High | Rare, heavy results. Long stretches can pass with nothing meaningful, and the swings are severe in both directions. | Experienced players with a large bankroll and the discipline to sit through a quiet run without chasing. |
Minimum bet, maximum win and provider
Minimum bet is the smallest stake the game accepts per round, and it is the most practical number on the page: it tells you how many rounds your balance buys. A ₹5 minimum on a ₹500 balance is a hundred rounds — enough to actually experience the game. A ₹50 minimum on the same balance is ten, which is not a session, it is a coin flip.
Max win is expressed as a multiplier of your stake, and it is the number most often misread. A 5,000x max win describes the theoretical ceiling of the game's paytable — the single best outcome the maths permits. It is not a target, it is not likely, and on high-volatility titles it is astronomically rare. Read it as a description of the game's shape, not as an ambition.
Provider is the studio that built and operates the game — Pragmatic Play, PG Soft, Evolution, JILI, Spribe and others. This matters more than it looks: the provider, not ic7 game, generates the outcome. We do not touch the result. The RNG is certified and run on the studio's own infrastructure, which is exactly why we publish the provider name on every page.
Choosing The Right Game For Your Budget
Most players choose a game by its artwork and then wonder why the session went badly. The better approach is backwards: start with the money you have decided you can afford to lose, work out how many rounds you want that money to buy, and let those two numbers choose the game for you.
The arithmetic is not complicated. Take your session budget and divide it by the minimum bet of the game you are considering. If the answer is under fifty rounds, the game is too expensive for that budget — not because it is a bad game, but because you will not get to experience it. Fifty rounds of anything is a sample so small that variance, not the game, decides your outcome entirely. Aim for two hundred or more.
Then apply volatility. A high-volatility slot with a ₹5 minimum still demands a bigger balance than a low-volatility one at the same stake, because the quiet stretches are longer and you need to be able to sit through them without flinching. If your budget only just covers two hundred rounds, choose low or medium volatility. Save the high-volatility titles for a session where a long dry run will not tempt you into raising your stake.
And be honest about the category. If ₹500 is your budget, crash games will spend it in minutes and fishing arcades will spend it while you are still learning the controls. A medium-volatility slot at the minimum stake will give you an evening. That is not a smaller ambition — it is the only version of this that stays entertainment.
- Decide the number before you open the app. A budget set while you are calm is a budget. A budget set mid-session is a negotiation you will lose.
- Divide budget by minimum bet. If it does not buy you at least 200 rounds, pick a cheaper game or a smaller stake — not a bigger deposit.
- Match volatility to bankroll. Small balance, low or medium volatility. High volatility needs depth to survive its own quiet stretches.
- Start at the minimum stake. You can always raise it once you understand how the game actually behaves. Almost nobody regrets starting small.
- Set a loss limit and a win limit. Walking away from a winning session is far harder than it sounds — decide the number in advance, not in the moment.
- Use the in-app deposit cap. Lowering it takes effect immediately; raising it takes 24 hours by design. That delay is the whole point.
- Never top up to chase a loss. The odds have no memory of what just happened to you, and a second deposit does not reset anything except your balance.
Games Library FAQ
What players ask us most about the catalogue. If your question is not here, message us on Telegram.
There are 106+ titles live right now, spread across seven categories: slots, live casino, card games, crash and instant, fishing arcades, lottery and bingo, and sports-themed games. Slots make up the largest share at around seventy titles. The exact count for each category is printed on the filter buttons at the top of this page, and it updates as the library grows — so the number on the tab is always the live figure, not a marketing one.
Search or filter and compare — every game's RTP is printed on its card and its detail page, which is precisely why we publish it. As a rule, low-house-edge card games such as blackjack and baccarat sit at the top, with slots typically ranging from about 94% to 97%. But a higher RTP is a long-run efficiency figure, not an edge: it does not overcome the house advantage and it tells you nothing about your session. Use it to compare two games, never as a reason to expect a return.
Many of our slot and instant titles offer a demo mode inside the app, funded with play money so you can learn the paytable and the bonus triggers without staking anything. Availability is set by the game studio, not by us, so it varies title to title — and live dealer tables never have one, because a real dealer is dealing a real deck. Demo mode is a good way to learn a game's rules, but remember it cannot teach you how a real balance feels.
Many slots open from around ₹5 a round, which is the lowest stake on the platform. Card and live dealer tables typically start higher, because table minimums are set by the studio running them and live tables carry a real operating cost. The exact minimum for every title is printed on its detail page, in the specifications table — check it before you play, and divide your session budget by it to see how many rounds you are actually buying.
A medium-volatility slot at the minimum stake. There are no decisions to get wrong, the rules fit on one screen, and your balance lasts long enough to actually learn how the game behaves. Avoid crash and instant games until you have played a while — rounds resolve in seconds and it is genuinely easy to lose track. If you already know Teen Patti or Andar Bahar from playing offline, start there instead; the rules will feel familiar from the first hand.
Yes — new titles land most weeks as our studio partners release them, and recent additions carry a "new" tag on their card so you can spot them in the grid. We add games because players ask for them, and we occasionally retire ones that nobody plays. Our Telegram community at @yn_games is where new releases get announced first, usually a day or two before they appear here.
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