Loki Casino Games — 6,700+ Slots, Live Tables & RTP Data

Updated July 2026
Licensed
Available in US
Fast payouts
18+ Only
Loki Casino game catalogue with slots, live tables and provider overview

The first time I opened Loki Casino’s game lobby I did what I always do: I counted. Not the games themselves — that number was plastered across the homepage — but the providers. The number of software studios integrated into a casino tells you more about the platform’s architecture and ambition than the headline game count ever will. A catalogue with 6,700 titles from a dozen providers is a different proposition entirely from 6,700 titles spread across 100+ studios, and that distinction shapes everything from game variety to RTP transparency.

In this guide I am going to walk through how Loki Casino’s catalogue is organised, map the provider landscape by tier and specialisation, cover the slot categories and live casino offering, and explain how the lobby’s filtering tools let you make informed choices based on RTP and volatility data. I will also address a gap that experienced players will notice immediately: the absence of several marquee progressive jackpot titles. If you are looking for a deep dive into specific high-RTP slot recommendations, I have written a separate piece on high-RTP slots at Loki Casino. This article focuses on the catalogue as a whole — its strengths, its structure, and its blind spots.

Catalogue Size: How 6,700+ Titles Are Structured

When an offshore casino advertises “6,700+ games” the natural question is: what does that number actually include? At Loki Casino the answer is everything — slots, table games, live dealer tables, virtual sports, scratch cards, and specialty titles like crash games and dice. By 2028, the iGaming market is projected to reach 243.2 million users with a volume of approximately 130 billion euros, and the operators chasing that expanding audience are competing partly on catalogue breadth. More titles mean more reasons for a player to stay on the platform rather than opening a second account elsewhere.

The catalogue is powered by the SoftSwiss aggregation platform, which acts as a middleware layer connecting the casino’s front-end lobby to dozens of game providers’ servers. This architecture means Loki Casino does not host the games directly — it integrates them through provider APIs, and the SoftSwiss platform handles the data flow between the player’s browser and the game server. The practical implication is that adding new providers and titles is relatively fast: SoftSwiss negotiates the integration at the platform level, and all casinos running on that platform gain access simultaneously. It also means that the game catalogue at Loki Casino is not curated in the traditional sense. The operator is not hand-picking individual titles for quality; it is onboarding entire provider portfolios, which results in a mix of premium, mid-tier, and filler content.

SoftSwiss platform game aggregation and provider integration

I spent an afternoon sorting through the lobby, and the distribution is roughly what you would expect from a high-volume aggregation model. Slots dominate, comprising well over 80% of the total count. Table games — blackjack, roulette, baccarat and poker variants — make up a smaller but meaningful slice. Live dealer tables are counted separately in the lobby but included in the headline figure. Specialty games, virtual sports, and miscellaneous titles fill the remainder. The sheer volume is impressive on paper, but volume without organisation is just noise. The question is whether the lobby tools let you cut through 6,700 titles to find the ones that match your preferences — and that depends entirely on the filtering system, which I will cover in the RTP section below.

One structural note that matters for experienced players: not all 6,700 titles are available in all regions at all times. Provider licensing restrictions mean that some studios geo-block their games in certain jurisdictions, and the available catalogue for a UK-based player may differ slightly from what a player in Canada or Australia sees. The lobby does not always make this distinction clear — a game might appear in search results but return an error when you try to launch it. It is an irritation rather than a dealbreaker, but it means the actual playable catalogue is somewhat smaller than the advertised number. In my testing, the reduction for UK-connected sessions was modest — perhaps 5% to 10% of the total — but individual experiences will vary depending on your IP location and any VPN configuration, which brings its own risks with offshore operators who may void accounts for location masking.

Software Provider Landscape: Tiers and Specialisations

I remember a conversation with a game producer at an iGaming conference who told me, quite bluntly, that “nobody picks a casino because of the provider list.” He was wrong. The provider landscape is the backbone of the game catalogue, and at Loki Casino, the breadth of that landscape is one of its genuine differentiators within the Dama N.V. network.

The platform integrates titles from over 100 software providers, and they fall into roughly three tiers. The first tier includes the established names that players and industry professionals recognise immediately: Pragmatic Play, Evolution Gaming, Play’n GO, NetEnt, Microgaming (under its current branding), Yggdrasil, and Push Gaming. These studios produce the games that drive the majority of player engagement — the branded titles, the high-production slots, the live dealer suites. Their presence at Loki Casino is expected rather than exceptional; any SoftSwiss-powered platform of this size integrates the major players as a baseline.

Major slot game provider studios integrated at Loki Casino

The second tier is where things get more interesting. Studios like Hacksaw Gaming, Nolimit City, Thunderkick, Elk Studios, Red Tiger Gaming, and Relax Gaming occupy a space between mainstream recognition and niche appeal. These are the providers producing many of the high-volatility, bonus-buy slots that dominate the current meta among experienced players. Nolimit City’s extreme variance titles, Hacksaw Gaming’s bonus-buy mechanics, and Elk Studios’ visual storytelling represent distinct design philosophies that cater to different player profiles. The depth of second-tier coverage at Loki Casino is above average for the segment — some competitors carry the top-tier names but thin out dramatically below that.

High-volatility bonus buy slot machines from second-tier providers

The third tier comprises smaller, regional, or newer studios: providers you might not recognise unless you actively explore beyond the lobby’s front page. Names like BGaming, Belatra, Endorphina, Wazdan, and dozens of others contribute hundreds of titles each to the overall count. Many of these games are competent but unspectacular — solid RTP, standard mechanics, professional presentation, but lacking the production value or innovative features of the higher-tier studios. Their inclusion inflates the catalogue number, and while individual titles can surprise you, the third tier exists primarily to provide volume and variety rather than headline attractions.

Andrey Starovoitov, co-CEO of SoftSwiss, has acknowledged that despite fluctuations in cryptocurrency rates and changes in market shares, digital coins continue to be popular among players — a point relevant here because several crypto-native providers, particularly those producing provably fair games, appear in Loki Casino’s catalogue alongside the traditional studios. These crypto-focused providers offer crash games, dice, plinko, and other house-edge titles that operate on verifiable blockchain mechanics. They represent a small but growing segment of the overall provider landscape, and their inclusion reflects the platform’s crypto-forward positioning.

The practical takeaway for players: the provider list at Loki Casino is wide enough that you are unlikely to miss a specific studio unless it is one of the few holdouts that do not integrate with SoftSwiss — Novomatic being the most notable absence. If your preferred slot or table game exists at a Curaçao-licensed casino, there is a high probability it is in this lobby somewhere. The depth of integration also means that new releases appear quickly. When a major provider launches a title, it typically goes live across all SoftSwiss-powered casinos within days, sometimes simultaneously with the global launch. For players who follow new releases closely, that speed of deployment is a tangible benefit over smaller platforms that lag behind on integration.

Slot Categories Overview

The slot portion of the catalogue breaks down into several broad categories, each with its own mechanics and player appeal. Crypto casino slots in the 2025-2026 period cluster between 95.6% and 98.2% RTP, and the titles available at Loki Casino span that full range depending on the provider and game type.

Bonus Buy slots — titles that let you purchase direct access to the bonus round for a fixed multiple of your stake — have become the dominant category in offshore casino lobbies. At Loki Casino, providers like Hacksaw Gaming, Nolimit City, and Pragmatic Play contribute dozens of bonus-buy titles each. Megaways slots, which use the Big Time Gaming mechanic licensed across multiple studios, offer variable reel configurations that can produce over 100,000 ways to win on a single spin. Drops and Wins tournaments, run primarily through Pragmatic Play, add a competitive layer where players can earn prize pool shares on top of their regular winnings. Classic three-reel slots, video slots with traditional payline structures, and cluster-pays games round out the selection.

The breadth here is genuine. Unlike some smaller Dama N.V. casinos that carry 2,000 to 3,000 slots heavily weighted toward a few providers, Loki Casino’s slot library draws from the full spectrum of its 100+ studio integrations. The challenge is navigation rather than availability — with thousands of slots to choose from, finding the right game requires effective filtering tools. I should also note that the category labels in the lobby are not always consistent: a game tagged “Bonus Buy” by one provider might appear under “Feature Buy” from another, and some titles sit in multiple categories simultaneously. It is a minor taxonomy issue, but it can make category-based browsing less precise than it should be. The search bar, combined with provider filtering, tends to be more reliable than relying on category tags alone.

Slot category filters and lobby navigation tools

Live Casino: A Brief Overview

Live and in-play betting captured 53.40% market share in 2025, and that appetite for real-time, dealer-driven gameplay translates directly into the live casino section at Loki Casino. The offering is anchored by Evolution Gaming, which provides the majority of live tables including blackjack, roulette, baccarat, and game-show-format titles. Pragmatic Play Live and several smaller studios supplement the lineup with additional table variants and regional specialities.

The live section includes standard and VIP tables with varying stake ranges, from low-limit tables suitable for casual play to high-roller rooms with per-hand limits in the thousands. Stream quality is dependent on the provider’s studio infrastructure, and the major studios deliver consistently high-quality video and audio. The lobby presents live tables with real-time seat availability and current dealer information, which helps avoid the frustration of selecting a table only to find it full. For a detailed breakdown of live table types, limits and studio quality at Loki Casino, I cover that in a separate piece.

Live casino roulette table with dealer and betting interface

RTP and Volatility: How to Use Loki’s Lobby Filters

Here is where I get genuinely enthusiastic, and it does not happen often. The RTP filter in Loki Casino’s lobby is one of the more useful tools I have encountered at an offshore casino. Most competitors either do not display RTP data at all or bury it inside individual game info screens that require clicking into each title. Loki Casino surfaces RTP as a filterable parameter in the lobby — not perfectly, not for every game, but for enough of the catalogue to make informed decisions without opening a spreadsheet.

RTP — return to player — represents the theoretical percentage of wagered money that a game returns over an extended period. UK online casino games generated 5 billion pounds in GGY in FY2024/25, with slots accounting for 83.5% of that, which means the house edge embedded in RTP is the primary mechanism through which casinos generate revenue from slot players. A slot with 96% RTP has a 4% house edge; a slot with 94% RTP has a 6% house edge. Over hundreds of spins, that two-percentage-point difference translates into real money — roughly 20 pounds more retained by the house per 1,000 pounds wagered.

Volatility is the complementary metric. A low-volatility slot pays out frequently but in smaller amounts; a high-volatility slot pays rarely but with larger potential wins. The lobby does not always display volatility as explicitly as RTP, but providers like Pragmatic Play and Hacksaw Gaming label their games with volatility ratings (often on a scale from 1 to 5 or using terms like “medium-high”). Combining RTP and volatility gives you a clearer picture than either metric alone: a 96.5% RTP, high-volatility slot will play very differently from a 96.5% RTP, low-volatility slot, even though the long-term return is theoretically identical.

The lobby also supports filtering by provider, which is a proxy for style preference. If you know that Nolimit City makes the extreme-variance games you enjoy, you can filter the catalogue to show only that studio’s titles. Combining provider filters with category tags — Megaways, Bonus Buy, Jackpot — narrows 6,700 titles down to a manageable shortlist. It is not a perfect system. Some games are miscategorised, some lack RTP data entirely, and the search function occasionally returns results for games that are geo-blocked in your region. But it is materially better than scrolling through an unfiltered wall of thumbnails, which is what several competitor platforms still offer.

My practical recommendation: start every session by filtering for your preferred provider, then sort by RTP if the option is available. You will quickly identify which games in that studio’s portfolio offer the lowest house edge, and you can cross-reference volatility before committing your bankroll. This takes sixty seconds and can meaningfully affect your long-term outcomes.

RTP filter tool for informed game selection in casino lobby

One caveat worth mentioning: the RTP displayed in the lobby is the theoretical RTP set by the provider, not a live measurement of what the game is actually returning at Loki Casino specifically. Providers often offer operators a choice of RTP configurations — the same slot might run at 96.5% at one casino and 94.0% at another. SoftSwiss-powered casinos generally use the default provider settings, which tend to be the higher RTP variants, but there is no public audit confirming which configuration Loki Casino has selected for each title. The absence of mandatory RTP disclosure is one of the differences between Curaçao and UKGC licensing: UKGC-licensed operators are required to display accurate, audited RTP data, while Curaçao-licensed operators face no such obligation. Take the lobby numbers as a useful guide, not a guarantee.

Notable Absent Titles: Mega Moolah, Hall of Gods and Progressive Jackpots

If you have played at UKGC-licensed casinos — the large UK-regulated platforms — you will notice a gap in Loki Casino’s catalogue that stands out immediately: the major progressive jackpot networks. Mega Moolah, the Microgaming-powered slot that has paid out some of the largest online jackpot wins in history, is not available. Hall of Gods, NetEnt’s Norse-themed progressive, is similarly absent. Mega Fortune, Age of the Gods, and several other well-known progressive titles are missing from the lobby.

This is not an oversight; it is a structural constraint. The major progressive jackpot networks are maintained by providers who restrict their jackpot-linked titles to casinos holding specific licences — typically UKGC, MGA, or other tier-one regulatory frameworks. Curaçao-licensed casinos are often excluded from these networks because the jackpot pools are shared across all participating casinos, and providers are unwilling to include operators outside their preferred regulatory perimeter in the same pool. The result is that Loki Casino can host regular (non-jackpot) titles from some of these providers but cannot access their progressive jackpot variants.

For players who specifically seek life-changing single-spin wins, this is a meaningful absence. Progressive jackpots at the major networks can reach seven and eight figures, and no amount of high-volatility bonus-buy slots can replicate that potential. For players who prefer controlled variance and are primarily interested in base-game mechanics, the absence of progressives is irrelevant — most progressive slots have lower base-game RTP than their non-jackpot equivalents because a portion of each wager feeds the jackpot pool rather than the player return.

The casino does offer some locally-pooled jackpot titles from smaller providers, and individual games with fixed jackpots or high maximum wins can produce substantial payouts. Pragmatic Play’s Drops and Wins titles, for example, feature daily and weekly prize pools that can reach significant sums, offering a tournament-style alternative to traditional progressive mechanics. Several bonus-buy slots also carry maximum win potentials of 10,000x to 50,000x the base stake, which on higher denominations can produce five- and six-figure outcomes — not progressive jackpot territory, but far from trivial.

But anyone comparing Loki Casino’s catalogue to a UKGC-licensed platform should be aware that the progressive jackpot segment — one of the most visible categories in regulated casino lobbies — is largely absent here. It is one of the tangible trade-offs of playing at a Curaçao-licensed offshore operator, and for some players, it will be a dealbreaker. For others who prefer predictable variance profiles over lottery-scale long shots, the absence barely registers.

Progressive jackpot network restrictions at offshore casinos

What game providers are featured at Loki Casino?

Loki Casino integrates titles from over 100 software providers through the SoftSwiss platform. Major studios include Pragmatic Play, Evolution Gaming, Play’n GO, NetEnt, Yggdrasil, Push Gaming, Hacksaw Gaming, Nolimit City, Thunderkick, Elk Studios, Red Tiger Gaming, and Relax Gaming. The catalogue also includes dozens of smaller and regional studios such as BGaming, Belatra, Endorphina, and Wazdan.

Does Loki Casino offer provably fair games?

Loki Casino hosts provably fair titles from crypto-native providers, including crash games, dice, and plinko variants that operate on verifiable blockchain mechanics. These games allow players to independently verify the fairness of each round’s outcome. However, the majority of the catalogue consists of traditional RNG-based slots and table games from established providers, which are audited by third-party testing agencies rather than using provably fair technology.

Can I filter games by RTP or volatility in the lobby?

The lobby supports filtering by RTP for a significant portion of the catalogue, though not all games display this data. You can also filter by provider, game category, and features such as Bonus Buy or Megaways. Volatility information is available on some titles through their individual game info screens but is not consistently surfaced as a lobby-level filter. Combining provider and category filters is the most effective way to narrow down the 6,700+ title catalogue.

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