Mojabet’s live casino is yet to impress. Less than 30 live tables is let’s be painfully honest – almost unheard of. Most gaming sites nowadays have more than that in just a single category. Not Mojabet though. The only redeeming quality of the live casino is the quality and the tasteful pick of titles. You will find Evolution Gaming behind key tables and you will find what I believe to be the most important lobbies. Lightning Roullte, Infinite Blackjack and a handfull of game shows make Mojabet a somewhat viable option nonetheless.
Right when you enter the live casino there’s a Category strip with five round buttons:
So at least Mojabet isn’t playing hide-and-seek with the basics. The annoying bit is the page is basically a stack of horizontal rows, each with an All > link on the right. It feels a bit like a ghost town here. If you came just for that, you won’t be happy.
This row is basically the “don’t think, just click something” shelf.
What’s sitting there right away:
I like that Flash Roulette is right there because it’s exactly the kind of thing you tap when you don’t want to stare at a slow wheel. Marble Race being in “Favorite Live” is… sure. If you’re the type that opens live casino and immediately chooses chaos, it’s waiting.
Also: the tiles show the provider labels under the game names. That’s one of those small details you only appreciate when you’ve clicked the same “different” game on three sites and it was identical every time.
This is where the page stops pretending and just goes full roulette bonanza.
The first four I can see:
So yeah, you’re not short on “roulette, but louder.” Two different Lightning versions back-to-back is basically Mojabet saying: pick your multiplier poison.
Royal Roulette looks like the calmer option wedged between Evolution’s flashy stuff and BetGames’ straightforward Live Roulette. If you want the normal wheel vibe without the screen screaming at you, that’s probably the click.
This row is the loud corner. And it doesn’t pretend otherwise.
Visible tiles:
The mix here is interesting because it’s not just game shows. Gravity Sic Bo isn’t a “game show” in the way Crazy Time is, but it’s shoved in the same row anyway. I get why –it’s fast, it’s animated, it scratches the same itch –but still, it’s a bit “we didn’t know where else to put this, so here you go.”
Also, seeing Crash Live inside the live casino shelf is a very Zambia-coded vibe. The page already feels built around the stuff people actually tap first, not the stuff a casino brochure would brag about.
This section looks like it’s trying to prove a point: “Yes, blackjack exists here, calm down.”
The row shows:
It’s very ICONIC21-heavy here. Like, five out of six tiles are ICONIC21 before Evolution shows up with Infinite Blackjack at the end.
The naming is also doing a lot: Grand Bonus, 360 Midnight, Oasis VIP… all I really want to know is whether I can sit down, pick a stake, and not have the UI fight me. But this is the live casino world –everyone names blackjack tables like they’re nightclub sections.
This is the “misfits” row, but at least it’s honest about it.
Three tiles, all ICONIC21. Andar Bahar being here is actually a nice touch –it’s one of those games some sites just ignore completely, then you’re stuck with roulette/blackjack forever.
The Kickoff looks like it belongs in the “I clicked this by accident and stayed” category. The kind of game you open while waiting for someone to finish a phone call, then you realize you’ve been staring at it for ten minutes.
Left sidebar has two useful sections that save you from endless scrolling:
Categories
Those numbers are small enough that it doesn’t feel like an infinite catalogue pretending to be “massive.” It’s more like: “Here’s the core live set we’re pushing.”
Providers
This is the page’s true personality. If you’re picky about providers, you can quickly see the balance: BetGames is essentially two entries holding up an entire provider tab like “we’re here too,” Evolution is present (and brings the big-name game shows), and ICONIC21 dominates the shelves.
If provider filters aren’t visible like this, you end up playing “guess the studio” based only on thumbnail art, which is why I like them.
In Zambia, Mojabet’s live casino is essentially a small but well-picked live games collection that pretends to deliver the full thing. After a single scroll, you realize this is the reality of things. It’s more like “hey, we have a live casino”, more than anything else. It’s by no means a selling point or something to be looking forward to.