Reference

Deal Or No Deal live tables for India

y67 hosts Deal Or No Deal tables with a clear case board, live banker calls, and screen layouts that stay readable on phone or desktop.

Live HostCase BoardBanker OfferMobile View
y67 Deal Or No Deal live tables for India
y67 What sits inside the Deal Or No Deal room

What sits inside the Deal Or No Deal room

We keep the round flow close to the classic format: choose a case, open smaller cases, and decide when the banker offer feels worth taking. The remaining amounts stay visible on the board, so each move has context instead of guesswork. On y67, the room loads from the lobby with the live host and offer screen already in place, which makes it

easier to follow the pace from the first pick.

  • Case ladder
  • Offer screen
  • Round history
ROUND LIGHTS

Three Deal Or No Deal angles

These three cards point to the parts of Deal Or No Deal that matter most when you join from India: the host, the case board, and the offer screen.

Banker call moment
Opening run
Small-screen layout
y67 mobile gaming
PHONE LAYOUT

Deal Or No Deal on your phone

Deal Or No Deal keeps its rhythm on a smaller screen because the case board, host window, and offer button stay in one clean column.

y67 mobile gaming
Portrait Mode
Landscape View
Thumb Reach
Quick Resume
HELP DESK

Help during a live round

If the banker screen pauses, a case does not open cleanly, or the board feels out of step, reach us from the game room and send…

Table stalled If the round stops after a case pick, stay on the page and reopen…
Offer mismatch When the banker number looks different from the pace you expected, send the round…
Return to board If you leave mid-round, come back through the same Deal Or No Deal entry…
ROOM RECORD

How we keep the room clear

Deal Or No Deal depends on a clear live feed, visible round history, and the same case order for every seat in the room.

Round log

Each round keeps a visible log of the case opens and the banker offer, so you can match the pace…

Case trail

The remaining cases stay on screen as the game moves ahead, which helps you see why the next offer rose…

Host feed

The live host and the board follow the same sequence for every seat, so the table does not drift from…

Session stamp

Each entry shows the time you joined and the point where you left, which makes a return to the room…

Room record

We keep the round record tied to the Deal Or No Deal table, not buried in a separate page.

Table source

The lobby shows the same Deal Or No Deal room each time you open it, so you know which stream…

How our table differs

Some Deal Or No Deal rooms hide the offer screen, push the case board low on the page, or make you zoom on mobile.

Offer screenWe keep the banker call beside the board, while some rooms tuck it away. You can read the number and the remaining cases at the same time, which matters when the next choice is close.
Case rowThe case row stays in view after every pick, so the round does not feel broken into separate screens. That makes it easier to count what is left before the next offer.
Mobile fitOn a phone, the table scales without cutting off the amounts. Other rooms often need pinch-zoom, but here the main actions stay readable with one hand.
Return pathIf you step away, the table entry returns you to the same room rather than a fresh lobby path. That keeps your place in the round easier to recover.
Host paceThe host timing stays tight to the case opens, so the banker call arrives with enough context. Some rooms leave long gaps that make the rhythm feel uneven.
Amount boardThe remaining amounts are arranged so you can spot the big numbers at a glance. That helps you judge whether to hold the case or accept the offer.
Round clarityThe stage, the board, and the offer all sit in one flow, which reduces extra taps. You get a cleaner read on each decision point before the next case opens.

Deal Or No Deal signals

These highlights show the parts of Deal Or No Deal that you will notice first: the case board, the banker call, the timer, the host window…

Case board

The board keeps the full set of amounts visible while the round runs, so you can see what still matters before each pick. That makes the case choice easier to follow.

Banker call

The offer appears beside the board, not hidden behind an extra tap. You can read it at the same moment the room is showing the next case to open.

Round timer

The timer stays in sight during the decision point, which helps you judge the pace of the offer. It gives the round a clear rhythm without forcing you to guess how long is left.

Host window

The live host window stays active through the round, so the spoken cue and the visual board move together. That keeps the game easy to follow on a phone or desktop.

Amount ladder

The ladder shows which amounts are still alive after every case. You can tell at a glance whether the board is leaning toward a low or strong finish.

Return lane

If you step out briefly, the entry back into the room is easy to find. You can return to the same Deal Or No Deal table without searching through extra pages.

Deal Or No Deal questions

These questions cover the round flow, the banker offer, mobile use, and what happens if you step out between cases. We keep the answers tied to the same Deal Or No Deal room so you can open it with a clear sense of timing and layout. If you want the shortest path in, start here and then join the lobby when you are ready.

After you open the table, you choose a case and the first set of smaller cases starts to fall away. The banker call comes after that opening run, once the board has enough shape to read.

Keep the offer, the remaining amounts, and the timer in the same view. The decision is easier when you read all three together rather than treating the call as a separate screen.

Yes. The case row stacks cleanly, and the live window stays readable without constant zooming. Portrait mode suits quick sessions, while landscape gives you a wider look at the board.

If the round is still live, use the same table entry in the lobby and you will return to the current board. If the round has moved on, the next room state will be shown instead.

They sit on the main board beside the live host, so you can track what is still in play after every pick. That layout keeps the next case choice grounded in the actual numbers.

The room name, host feed, and round sequence appear together, which makes the table easy to identify before the first case opens. That helps you stay with the same session if you return later.

Stay on the room and send the round time to support. We check the table record for that exact moment, which makes it easier to match what you saw with the session log.