How the BC.Game sportsbook is organised
The sportsbook is a separate surface inside the same account. Navigation splits by sport, then league, then match. The bet slip docks on the right on desktop and at the bottom on mobile. Coverage breadth is genuinely wide: dozens of football leagues, every major basketball competition, ATP and WTA tennis at every tour level, UFC and Bellator across MMA, plus an unusually deep esports section.
Bet types follow the standard sportsbook menu: straight bets, multi-leg parlays, system bets and live wagering. Cash-out is offered on a wide set of markets. The bet slip clearly shows minimum stake, maximum payout and any restrictions before you place.

Football coverage
The Champions League, every major European top flight, internationals and the long tail of cup competitions are priced pre-match and live. Markets include 1X2, double chance, over/under goals, both teams to score, Asian handicap and correct score, with player and team props on the bigger fixtures. Asian handicap usually carries the lowest margin of the standard markets — worth knowing if you bet football regularly.
Live coverage is solid on top leagues, with minute-by-minute price refreshes. Smaller leagues sometimes go pre-match only or shrink the live market tree.
Basketball
NBA gets the most depth: full team props, player points/rebounds/assists/threes, halftime markets, race-to props and live betting through every quarter. EuroLeague, NCAA and the major national leagues round out the offering with thinner but functional market trees. Player prop pricing is sharp on top games; live betting moves on every possession.
Tennis
Grand Slams, ATP 1000s, WTA 1000s and the year-end finals carry the deepest trees. Smaller events have match winner and set markets but thinner in-play. Tennis is well suited to live betting because the structure is discrete — pricing reacts to break points and momentum swings cleanly.
MMA, boxing, baseball, hockey
Every UFC card is priced with method of victory, round betting and a full prop tree. Bellator, PFL and ONE Championship are covered with shallower trees. MLB and NHL each get full-season coverage with the standard moneyline, runline/puckline, totals and series markets. Boxing follows the major promotions.
Esports
The esports section is one of BC.Game's strengths. CS2, Dota 2, League of Legends, Valorant, Rainbow Six Siege and Call of Duty all get tournament coverage. Tier-1 events have deep market trees (map winners, first-blood, total kills, correct score); smaller tournaments cover series and map winners. Lines move on roster news fast, so following team accounts the day of a match is a real edge.
What to read before your first ticket
Three things on the bet slip's small print actually matter: minimum stake, maximum payout per ticket and settlement rules for postponed or abandoned matches. These vary by sport — postponed tennis can be settled differently than postponed football, for example. Read once, keep playing.
A note on responsible bankroll: tickets should be sized as a small fraction of your sportsbook bankroll — most disciplined bettors stay under 2% per ticket and well under 5% on a parlay. The platform's deposit limit tools apply to sportsbook play the same way they apply to casino play.
For the headline numbers and wagering math, see our BC.Game welcome bonus breakdown. If you're new, start with our getting-started walkthrough. For a side-by-side look at the competition, see how BC.Game stacks up against Stake and Roobet.
Why people pick BC.Game's sportsbook
Three reasons turn up consistently. First, the esports depth is real, not cosmetic. Second, crypto funding means a deposit and a first ticket can happen inside two minutes on a fast network. Third, the live market tree on top events is genuinely competitive with mainstream sportsbooks.
What it doesn't replace: a sharp sports book that's been tuned for a specific market over a decade. If you bet a single niche league heavily, compare lines before committing. BC.Game's strength is breadth, not razor-thin specialisation in one sport.


