Our Review

Reviewed by the expert
About the author
Meet Jure, a crash and plinko gambling expert with 5+ years of experience in the genre and an advocate for responsible play. With a deep understanding of gambling odds, strategies, games, and risk, Jure has helped countless players demystify game mechanics and RNGs. Outside of work, Jure likes nothing more than a good road trip.
Reviewed by the expert avatar

Gameplay experience and features

Mines by Spribe comes from the same studio behind Aviator and their Plinko variant, both of which lean hard into functionality over flash.

That identity carries fully into their Mines game.

The color palette, the grid borders, and the static background all feel like they belong to another gaming era.

While the dated visuals may initially be jarring, Spribe’s Mines still offers a stable, predictable, and fair gameplay foundation. Let me explain more.

Desktop version

Spribe Mines

On desktop, Spribe’s Mines presents as a very barebones interface. The grid is a standard 5×5 layout with clickable tiles and minimal animation.

The range is noticeably smaller than the one to twenty-four mines offered by Stake Originals or BC Originals, which limits how extreme your volatility settings can go.

The betting controls are straightforward. You choose your amount using buttons or a numeric field, and the placement of mines is done through a simple dropdown.

Everything is easy to use, but nothing feels modern or polished.

In comparison to Mines games from major crypto casinos, Spribe’s version feels almost prototype-like. Stake offers hotkeys, max bet toggles, instant bet settings, and multiple visual modes.

BC.Game adds float mode, movie mode, and an energetic aesthetic.

Spribe sticks strictly to functionality, falling far behind in visual appeal.

All inputs respond instantly, tile interactions are lag-free, and the game never stutters, even during long sessions.

Mines by Spribe

If you play Mines strictly for strategy testing, the simplicity might even be an advantage.

But in terms of user enjoyment, Spribe’s Mines is clearly lagging behind the competition.

Leaderboard and statistics

There are no leaderboards of any kind here. No Lucky Wins or High Wins sections. No public tracking of player performance or major multipliers.

For players who enjoy community elements or want to compare their results with others, this is a significant omission.

Mobile version

Mobile performance is one of the more positive aspects of Spribe’s Mines.

The game loads instantly on both iOS and Android.

Mines by Spribe mobile

Tile tapping accuracy is good, and I experienced no accidental misclicks.

However, the outdated design becomes even more noticeable on small screens.

There is no landscape gameplay option, no resizing mode, and no additional UX adaptations for mobile beyond basic responsiveness.

I found the controls easy enough to use and the game runs smoothly, but it does not feel optimized for mobile in the modern sense. It runs well, but it does not impress.

Gameplay options

Manual mode

Manual play in Spribe’s Mines is exactly what you would expect from a traditional Minesweeper-style game. You select your mines, set your bet, and begin clicking.

One limitation is the absence of a “repeat bet” function.

Mines by Spribe on mobile

This feature is extremely convenient in Mines because players often run repeating strategies across multiple sessions.

Having to manually re-enter bets removes some fluidity from gameplay.

Outside of this, manual mode runs reliably, and interacting with the grid feels responsive.

Auto mode

I’ve been quite critical of Spribe’s Mines, but I have to give credit when it’s due.

Spribe Mines Auto

The auto mode is great.

You can:

  • Run between 3 and 500 automated rounds
  • Stop if your balance increases past a set amount
  • Stop if your balance decreases past a limit
  • Stop if a single win exceeds a specific value
  • Reset bet after a win or loss
  • Increase or decrease bet by a percentage after a win/loss

This makes Spribe’s Mines a legitimate option for players who enjoy strategy automation.

You can simulate Martingale, Anti-Martingale, d’Alembert, or custom percentage-based progressions.

Very few non-original Mines games offer this level of automation.

Pros and cons

Pros

✅ Excellent automation tools for strategy-focused players
✅ Very stable performance on both desktop and mobile
✅ Fully documented provably fair system
✅ Available in many casinos
✅ Simple gameplay that never lags
✅ Easy to understand controls and no clutter

Cons

❌ Severely outdated visual design
❌ No hotkeys at all
❌ Only 1–20 mines allowed
❌ No instant bet or max bet functions

Final words

Mines by Spribe is, without a doubt, functional but outdated.

It feels like a legacy product that was never fully modernized.

On top of that, there are no leaderboards or advanced UX features, and the mine count is more limited than competing titles.

If you play at many casinos, you may find it decent. However, it can’t compete with the top games in the genre, and that’s evident.

Reviewed by the expert avatar
Reviewed by the expert
About the author
Meet Jure, a crash and plinko gambling expert with 5+ years of experience in the genre and an advocate for responsible play. With a deep understanding of gambling odds, strategies, games, and risk, Jure has helped countless players demystify game mechanics and RNGs. Outside of work, Jure likes nothing more than a good road trip.