Game RTPs at Playamo: How to Find Them
Where do RTP figures usually hide on a casino game page?
Most of the time, you’ll find RTP inside the game info panel, help section, or paytable. Open the table game, tap the menu icon, and look for terms like “RTP,” “return to player,” “game rules,” or “info.” For blackjack and roulette variants, the number may sit deeper than on slots, because the payout depends on rules, side bets, and table settings.
At Playamo, that search can take a bit of digging depending on the provider. Some studios show RTP clearly in the lobby; others bury it inside the game client. If you’re checking a live title, the posted percentage may be tied to a specific version, so the same game name can have more than one RTP across markets.
Why does the same table game sometimes show different RTPs?
Because providers don’t always lock one percentage forever. A blackjack or baccarat release can launch with one RTP, then get adjusted for different jurisdictions, bet structures, or operator settings. That’s normal in the industry, but it’s also where players get caught out.
Take blackjack: a classic version can sit around 99.5% or higher under favorable rules, while side bets can drag the effective return down fast. Roulette is similar in a different way. European roulette usually offers a better baseline than American roulette because the extra zero changes the house edge. Same game name, different math.
Quick reality check: RTP is a long-term average, not a promise for your next session. A 97% game can still pay out big tonight and punish you tomorrow.
Which table games are worth checking first for RTP?
Start with the games where rules matter most. Blackjack, baccarat, and roulette variants deserve the first look because small rule changes can shift expected return more than casual players think. Three-card poker and casino hold’em also deserve attention when they’re available, especially if side bets are involved.
Here’s a practical shortlist to inspect first:
- Blackjack — check rule sets, dealer behavior, and side bets.
- European Roulette — usually cleaner math than American roulette.
- Baccarat — low house edge, but commission rules matter.
- Three Card Poker — base game and bonus bets can differ sharply.
- Casino Hold’em — paytables can move the RTP noticeably.
If you want an external benchmark on fairness and licensing, the UK Gambling Commission explains how regulated operators are expected to present game information, while labs such as iTech Labs test RNG-driven products and certification claims.
Can you trust the RTP shown in the lobby?
Mostly, but don’t treat it as gospel without checking the actual game rules. Lobby figures are often accurate, yet they can be generic. A game may appear with a headline RTP, then open into a version with different limits, side bets, or local compliance settings that change the effective return.
For live dealer games, the RTP question gets messier. Some live tables have fixed rules and published returns; others depend on the specific casino configuration. If the operator doesn’t display the rules cleanly, that’s a warning sign. A missing RTP is not proof of anything shady, but it does make comparison harder.
What’s the fastest way to compare two table games before playing?
Use a three-step check: look at the RTP, look at the house edge, then look at the rule details. RTP tells you the long-run return; house edge is the flip side; rules explain why two versions of the same game can behave differently. That’s the quick filter most players skip.
Example: European roulette usually sits at 97.3% RTP, while American roulette drops to about 94.74%. That gap is not cosmetic. Over many spins, the difference compounds hard. If you’re choosing between two tables, the cleaner number usually wins unless bonus conditions or personal strategy make another choice better.
What should you do when a game’s RTP is missing or vague?
Walk away from the assumption that the game is “standard.” Check the provider’s official page, the in-game help file, and the casino’s terms. If none of those show a clear return figure, search the studio’s release notes or third-party certification references before staking money.
The link to operator or affiliate info can sometimes help, and in this case Playamo’s partner page can be part of the paper trail when you’re trying to trace how a game is presented in the ecosystem. Still, the cleanest move is to verify the exact title and version, then compare it against the provider’s published rules rather than trusting a banner or promo blurb.








No comments yet.