Are FPS drops more common in high-stakes casino game sessions?

During high roll poker and other casino game play, does anyone else perceive more frequent FPS drops in the live dealer games versus the low-stake ones? Is this due to server capacity, number of players involved, or something else? Would just like to know if others are experiencing this as well and why that is. Anyone from Dev or a regular player have any insight on this?

5 Answers

PortQualityCheck
PortQualityCheckAnswered on 12/22
Best Answer

Live dealer games can suffer from FPS dropouts. As far as I’m aware, high-limit games shouldn’t have worse drops than other games, although sometimes they appear to. It depends on your phone/connection. Live dealers use the same streaming as all casino games, so it’s not usually any issue with the game or dealer. When you have high-roller games with many players competing against top-level players, the server can handle the load just fine. Some people feel like high-limit games should have more issues, but I suspect it’s just that the dealers are slower on some phones/connectivity. If you’re getting dropouts, that’s likely your phone/connectivity rather than the dealer.

LootProbability
LootProbabilityAnswered on 12/22

Live dealer games don’t have FPS issues proportional to wager sizes: they are caused by the amount of work a server does. And if some game attracts more players or has a bigger tournament, that means more dealers, more cameras, more overlays – all of which mean more processing, so that there will be more lag when more players are playing, not only larger wagers. The software developers will do their best to optimize the code for more concurrent users, but at certain usage peaks, there may be issues. It’s not just you – someone else is probably experiencing it too. Just ask the software provider when the issue typically occurs most often. Chances are, it will be resolved with the next update.

FramePacing
FramePacingAnswered on 12/23

FPS issues are also prevalent on live bettings sites during high stakes games with real dealers, but this has little to do with the stake size. The problem is traffic and resource usage. High stakes attract many viewers and streamers who then place extra demands on the servers. High definition streaming and other features like statistics can lead to lagging or stuttering. Software developers generally strive to make their system work in these conditions, but this is never guaranteed. Most likely it is your Internet connection that is making the game slow. Many others would say the same, but I don’t think it is deliberate. It all depends on the capacity of the servers.

DecisionTree
DecisionTreeAnswered on 12/24

FPS issues are also more likely with live dealer games at high stakes – not only because more people (customers and dealers) and higher resolution streams are involved, but also because chat functions and high-roller monitoring tools are typically in use at such events. The fact that you are experiencing this is not a surprise then. Generally, however, developers track server performance very closely; they do not want to risk losing their whales. It depends on what platform you are using.

WikiEditor
WikiEditorAnswered on 12/25

Live dealer games tend to have more visible FPS drops because they attract heavier traffic. The games can handle any number of concurrent players, but peak hours with more big rollers joining bigger live dealer tables can overload the server, as can streaming quality, which must maintain higher standards for premium games. Software engineers do their best to keep them all in sync, but there are many variables: players, servers, and live action. Other people might not see it, but if you’re seeing it? You aren’t the only one.

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