HiLo guide and strategy at 1win
HiLo by Spribe at 1win is a card-prediction game with an RTP of up to 97%, where you predict whether the next card will be higher or lower and cashout after any correct guess. The game runs on a Curacao 8048/JAZ licence, and new players can register with ລະຫັດໂປຣໂມຊັ່ນ XLBONUS to receive a first-ການຝາກ ໂບນັດຕ້ອນຮັບ.
Key facts
| Provider | Spribe |
|---|---|
| RTP | Up to 97% |
| Prediction type | Higher / Lower (or Equal) |
| Min bet (USD equiv.) | $0.10 |
| Max bet (USD equiv.) | $500 |
| Auto-bet | Yes |
| Cashout | After each correct guess |
| Provably fair | Yes (Spribe seed system) |
How HiLo works
At the start of each HiLo round, a card from a virtual 52-card deck is revealed. You must predict whether the next card will be higher or lower in value, using standard card ranking (2 is lowest, Ace is highest). You can also bet on "equal" at higher odds. After predicting correctly, a new card is drawn, your multiplier increases, and you can either predict again or cashout.
The multiplier you receive for a correct prediction reflects the probability of that outcome given the currently shown card. If the current card is a 2, the vast majority of the remaining deck is higher, so guessing "higher" pays a very small multiplier (roughly 1.02x to 1.05x). If the current card is a King, guessing "lower" is near-certain and also pays a minimal multiplier. When the current card is a 7 or 8, the deck is roughly split, and both higher and lower pay closer to 2x before the house edge is applied.
Spribe HiLo uses a continuously shuffled virtual deck seeded by the provably fair system. A new random sequence is generated for each round. There is no "deck depletion" across rounds; every round starts fresh.
If you guess incorrectly, the round ends and your stake is lost along with any multiplier accumulated during the round. If you guess correctly and choose to cashout, you receive your stake multiplied by the accumulated multiplier.
Strategy and bankroll for HiLo
Card counting does not work: This point is worth stating clearly. Traditional card-counting techniques from blackjack depend on tracking cards removed from a finite shoe over multiple hands. HiLo generates a fresh random sequence for every round using a provably fair seed. No card is "used up" between rounds, and even within a single round, the sequence is fully determined before you predict. There is no information revealed by previous cards that changes the probability of the next card in a way that card-counting could exploit.
Pure probability play: The correct approach to HiLo is probability-driven. When the current card is extreme (very high or very low), the safe choice is obvious and pays a tiny multiplier. When the current card is in the middle range (6, 7, 8, 9), both higher and lower are close to 50/50, and the payout reflects that near-even probability. The house edge is embedded in the multiplier: the true probability of guessing higher on a 7 is greater than 50%, but the multiplier is set slightly below the fair-odds value.
Cashout timing: Each consecutive correct guess raises your multiplier further. Staying in for more predictions increases potential return but introduces an independent probability of losing everything. Cashing out after 3-4 correct guesses is a common balanced approach. Chasing a 10-guess streak requires every single prediction to be correct, and the compounding probability of that makes it a very low-frequency outcome.
Auto-bet approach: You can configure auto-bet to always choose "higher" or always "lower." This is not a strategy; it is a mechanical convenience. Against the random card sequence, a fixed prediction direction has no edge. Use auto-bet to control session pace, not to gain a mathematical advantage.
Bankroll sizing: Use 1-2% of session bankroll per round. Because runs of incorrect guesses can end multiple rounds in sequence, a 50-unit session bankroll supports 25-50 rounds of varied outcomes. Set a stop-loss before the session and keep to it.
Provably fair verification in HiLo
Spribe HiLo uses the same dual-seed system as their other games. Before each round the server generates the complete card sequence and publishes its SHA-256 hash. Your client seed is combined with the server seed to produce the final sequence. After the round, the server reveals the original seed, which you can hash and compare to the pre-round hash to confirm it was not changed mid-game.
Using the published algorithm, you can reproduce every card in the sequence from the combined seeds and verify that the cards you saw were exactly those that were predetermined. This confirms the outcome was fixed before your first guess.
How to play HiLo at 1win
- ລົງທະບຽນ at 1win.codes and enter ລະຫັດໂປຣໂມຊັ່ນ XLBONUS in the promo field.
- Deposit to unlock your ໂບນັດຕ້ອນຮັບ.
- Open ຄາສິໂນ and navigate to the Crash or Spribe section to find HiLo.
- Place your stake and click Higher or Lower based on the card shown.
- After each correct guess, cashout to lock in your multiplier, or predict again to increase it further.
FAQ
What is the RTP of HiLo at 1win?
HiLo by Spribe carries an RTP of up to 97% at 1win.
Does card counting work in HiLo?
No. HiLo uses a continuously shuffled virtual deck driven by a provably fair RNG, not a finite deck that depletes. Previous cards have no effect on the probability of the next card being higher or lower. Card-counting strategies from blackjack do not apply.
Is HiLo provably fair?
Yes. Spribe HiLo uses a dual-seed provably fair system. The sequence of cards is determined before the round begins and encoded in the server seed hash shown before your first guess.
When can I cashout in HiLo?
You can cashout after any correct higher/lower prediction, locking in the current multiplier. If you guess wrong, the round ends and your stake is lost.
What suits and values appear in HiLo?
HiLo uses a standard 52-card virtual deck. When a middle value card appears (such as 7 or 8), the probability of the next card being higher or lower is close to even, so the payout multiplier for each choice is lower. When a 2 appears, higher is the near-certain outcome and pays a much lower multiplier; the same logic applies in reverse for an Ace.