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The Full Library

105 Games, One Lobby

Every title on IC7, in one place. Filter by category, search by name, and open any game's page to read exactly how it works before you play it.

Browse the library

Pick a category to narrow the grid, or type a game name into the search box. Categories are exclusive — every game sits in exactly one of them.

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A guide to the six categories

105 games is a lot to scroll through, and the fastest way to find something you will actually enjoy is to start with the category rather than the artwork. Here is what each one is really like to play, and who it suits.

Reels & Themes — 74 games

The largest category by a wide margin, and the one most people mean when they picture this kind of app. A themed grid of symbols resolves in a few seconds, and the interesting part is the feature engine sitting behind it: cascading drops that refill the grid, wilds that expand across a column, meters that carry a multiplier from one round into the next.

Because the loop is identical across every title, learning one teaches you all of them — only the theme and the feature engine change. Start with Fortune Gems if you want something simple, or Gates of Olympus if you want to see what a cascading multiplier engine feels like when it gets going.

Live Arena — 8 tables

Streamed from a studio with a real human host and a live camera feed. Nothing happens off-camera: you watch the cards dealt or the wheel spun, in one continuous shot, with a visible countdown telling you exactly how long you have to decide.

This is the most social category — hosts talk to the table and answer questions in chat. It is also the most demanding on your connection, because the round timer does not pause if your signal drops. Start by watching a couple of rounds at Lightning Roulette or Crazy Time before joining in.

Card & Table — 7 games

The games that need no introduction in India. Teen Patti in four variants, Andar Bahar, Dragon vs Tiger and Cricket War. Same rules you already know, with the shuffling and the arguments about hand rankings both handled by the software.

Rounds take under a minute and the rules panel is always one tap away. If you have played Teen Patti at Diwali, you can play it here without reading anything — although the on-screen rankings are worth a glance, because digital tables state their rules precisely and do not carry house-rule variation.

Instant Play — 7 games

Crash, Mines, Plinko X, HiLo, Keno and Go Rush. No paytable, no feature round — just a value climbing on screen and one decision: when to stop.

That simplicity is the appeal and the trap. A round takes five seconds rather than a minute, which means an hour here contains several times more rounds than an hour anywhere else on the platform. Use the auto-stop control, set a limit before you open the game, and count rounds rather than minutes.

Fishing Arena — 3 arenas

Arcade shooters, and the most hands-on games in the library. A cannon sits at the bottom of the screen, sea life drifts across it, and you choose what to shoot and how much power to put behind each shot. There are no rounds — the arena simply keeps going as long as you keep firing.

That open-ended structure is exactly why a session timer matters here more than anywhere else. Start in the lowest-difficulty room of Happy Fishing, learn how the targets move, and match your cannon power to what you are aiming at.

Arcade & Bingo — 6 games

The relaxed corner of the platform, and the best place to start if everything here is new to you. Bingo boards mark themselves, number games draw automatically, and arcade titles explain their single mechanic in the first thirty seconds. Nothing depends on reaction speed.

Try iRich Bingo or Magic Ball. Play fewer cards than you think you can follow — watching four cards properly beats half-watching twelve.

Every game has its own page

Click any card in the grid above to open that game's page: a full overview, a walkthrough of what a round actually looks like, what each feature does, strategy and common mistakes, a glossary of the terms that game uses, and the questions players ask most. It is all readable before you play a single round.

How to choose a game from a library this size

A hundred and five titles is more than anyone can meaningfully evaluate by scrolling. The players who get the most out of IC7 tend to follow the same rough process, and it takes about twenty minutes.

1. Pick the category before you pick the game

The artwork is the least informative thing on a game card. What actually determines whether you will enjoy a title is its category, because that decides the pace, the round length and how much of the game is a decision versus a thing you watch. A Reels title and an Instant Play title are more different from each other than any two reels games will ever be.

2. Read the game's page before you open it

Every title here has a full guide. Five minutes reading one is worth more than fifty rounds of learning by trial and error — and unlike the rounds, the reading is free.

3. Start at the lowest round value

On any game you have not played, stay at the lowest step until you have seen its feature trigger at least once and you understand what the game does when it gets interesting. Moving up later is easy. Moving down after a bad start is psychologically much harder, which is precisely why so few players manage it.

4. Give a title three sessions before you judge it

Short-run results tell you nothing about a game — they tell you about a handful of rounds. If you want to know whether you actually enjoy a title, ask yourself whether the base game held your attention, not whether the last twenty rounds went your way.

5. Keep a shortlist of three or four

Most long-term players do not roam the whole library. They find three or four titles they genuinely like and stay with them, dipping into the rest occasionally. That is a healthier and more enjoyable relationship with a games library than treating all 105 as a checklist.

What "volatility" means, and why it matters more than it sounds

Volatility describes how streaky a game feels. A high-volatility title has long quiet stretches punctuated by rarer, bigger results. A low-volatility title gives smaller results more regularly. Neither is better; they are different experiences, and confusing one for the other is the source of a great deal of unnecessary frustration.

The practical consequence is about session length. A high-volatility game will move through a short session much faster and feel much more punishing while it does, because the quiet stretches are the norm and not an anomaly. If you have twenty minutes and a small budget, a steadier title is simply a better fit. Cascading reels games and the Instant Play category tend to sit at the more volatile end; classic three-reel titles and bingo sit at the calmer end.

A word about "strategies" you will see online

You will find no shortage of videos, Telegram channels and forum posts offering Crash prediction tools, Mines patterns, staking systems and "guaranteed" methods. We will say this as plainly as we can: none of them work. Not one. The outcome of a round on this or any comparable platform is not something a pattern can predict, and the people selling those systems make their money selling the systems, not using them.

What genuinely changes a session is unglamorous and free: choosing a game that suits your temperament, playing at a value you are comfortable with, setting a limit before you start, and stopping when you reach it. That is the whole list. Anyone offering you more than that is offering you something that does not exist.

18+ and real money

These are real-money games with real financial risk, available to adults aged 18 and over, and not available in six Indian states. Play for entertainment, never with money you cannot afford to lose, and never to solve a financial problem. Free confidential support in India: Tele-MANAS, 14416, 24/7.

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