Jump into the live game categories SweepState currently tracks. Each hub focuses on casinos, guide content, and review notes relevant to that game type.
Browse slots-first casinos, daily bonus leaders, and slot-specific review notes.
View categoryCompare blackjack, roulette, baccarat, and other table-game friendly casinos.
View categorySee casinos that currently publish live dealer access and related terms.
View categoryFind sweepstakes-style poker options, including multiplayer and video poker coverage.
View categoryReview casinos that highlight instant-win and scratch-card style games.
View categorySee sports-style and prediction-based products covered in the current game taxonomy.
View categorySweepstakes operators usually arrange their lobbies around six broad buckets: slots, table games, live dealer, poker, scratch cards, and sports-style products. The split is partly historical. Regulated US casinos use the same shelves. And partly practical, because the dual-currency sweepstakes model handles each category a little differently. Slots and scratch cards run on provably fair RNG software and resolve in a single click, so they account for the bulk of Sweeps Coins traffic. Table games and live dealer rounds settle slower and often have lower house edges, which influences how operators stake bonus terms. Poker and sports-style picks are the smallest slice of sweepstakes coverage but the fastest-growing in 2025-2026 because new operators are testing them as differentiators.
When you click into a category page on this hub, the casino list is filtered to operators that publish that game type in their lobby and have it represented in our editorial review. That means the same brand can appear under several categories. A slots-first operator that also runs a small live dealer pit will show up on both pages, with the same review notes but a different shortlist ordering.
Every game on this hub is built on two numbers worth understanding: return-to-player (RTP) and volatilityRTP is the long-run percentage of staked currency a game pays back across millions of rounds. A 96% RTP slot returns about $96 for every $100 wagered over its full sample. Volatility describes how the wins are distributed: a low-volatility slot pays small amounts often, a high-volatility slot pays rarely but big.
In the sweepstakes context, both numbers still apply, but the currency you should care about is Sweeps Coins (the redeemable kind) rather than Gold Coins (the play-only kind). Most operators publish RTP per provider rather than per individual game. The providers hub has the breakdown. Higher RTP doesn't mean you'll win, it means the math works out better for players over time. Volatility is the one to match to your style: low-volatility games are friendly for grinding daily login rewards into a small redeemable balance, high-volatility games are the ones that occasionally produce the screenshot-worthy redemption stories.
If you are new to sweepstakes, slots are the friendliest landing point. The rules are familiar, daily login rewards are usually paid in slot-eligible currency, and the catalog overlaps heavily with the major US providers. Table-game players should check the live dealer category in parallel. The streamed product is closer to a regulated US casino in feel and usually has the smaller house edge. Poker remains a niche on the sweepstakes side. Only a handful of operators publish meaningful liquidity. Scratch cards are best treated as a quick-to-resolve session game rather than a primary library. Sports-style products are improving fast but the picks are still framed as social-prediction sweepstakes rather than traditional sportsbook bets.
Whatever category you start in, the pre-registration checks are the same: confirm the operator serves your state on the legal map, read the bonus terms for any sign-up or daily promo, and verify how Sweeps Coins are redeemed before you start grinding play. Game-type pages help narrow the catalog, but eligibility, prize-play access, and bonus structures still vary by brand and state.
The game category pages slice the same operator set you will find on the main sweepstakes casino directory, but they emphasize libraries, bonus surfaces, and review notes that matter for that play style. When you need side-by-side availability, trust signals, and payout commentary across every tracked brand, start from the directory listing and drill into a single review. Filters on directory and game pages only organize public information. They do not replace reading each operator's current terms, geolocation rules, or redemption requirements. If you are new to the model, read the beginner guide on how sweepstakes casinos work, then use the legal map for a state-level snapshot before you create an account. Responsible play resources on this site explain limits, self-control tools, and where to seek help if gameplay stops feeling entertaining.