Yes — official Dice Dreams free rolls are completely legit. SuperPlay, the studio behind the game, posts real reward links on its own Facebook page and Instagram most days, and they credit rolls to your account instantly. The problem is the swarm of copycat "free rolls generator" sites that surround the search results — those are scams. This page shows you exactly how to tell the difference.
The short answer
Free roll links from SuperPlay's official channels are safe and real. Anything that promises "unlimited rolls," runs a "generator," or asks you to "verify you're human" before you get rolls is a scam. There is no tool that manufactures free currency — the only real free rolls are the official daily links and the in-game methods.
What a real Dice Dreams link looks like
A genuine reward link is a rewards.dicedreams.com URL. When you tap it on the phone where the game is installed, it opens a simple Claim page and then launches Dice Dreams, where the rolls appear. That's the entire flow. It never:
- asks for your password or login;
- asks for payment or card details;
- makes you complete a survey, download an app, or "verify" anything;
- promises a specific giant number like "10,000 rolls."
We only ever list these real official links on our daily free rolls page.
The scams to avoid
Roll generators. A site or app claiming to "generate" unlimited rolls if you enter your username. It can't — there's no such feature. Best case it wastes your time; worst case it phishes your account.
Human-verification walls. You're told your rolls are "ready" but must complete an offer or survey first. The offer pays the scammer; the rolls never come. We cover this in depth in the truth about "no human verification".
Fake login pages. Anything asking you to sign in with your Facebook or game credentials on a non-official site is phishing designed to steal your account.
How to spot a fake in five seconds
- Does it ask for your password or payment? Real links never do. Instant red flag.
- Does it promise "unlimited" or a huge fixed number? Real links give modest amounts (around 50 rolls) and expire fast.
- Is there a "verification" step? Real rolls credit with one tap — no surveys, ever.
- Is the URL
rewards.dicedreams.com? If it's some other random domain claiming to be a generator, close it.
Staying safe (and still getting your free rolls)
You don't have to give up free rolls to stay safe — the legit sources are genuinely generous. Stick to the official daily links, use the in-game methods (hourly refills, gifts, invites, events), and never enter your credentials anywhere outside the game itself. That's it. For the full rundown of legit sources, read how to get free rolls, and grab today's verified links.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Dice Dreams free rolls legit?
The official ones are, yes. SuperPlay posts real reward links (rewards.dicedreams.com) on its own Facebook and Instagram most days, and they credit rolls instantly. What isn't legit: "generator" sites, unlimited-roll tools, and anything asking for verification, a password or payment.
Can you get banned for using free roll links?
No — the official reward links are made by SuperPlay for exactly this purpose, so using them is completely safe. What can get your account stolen is entering your login on a third-party "generator" site, which is a phishing scam, not a game feature.
Why do scam sites ask for human verification?
Because the "verification" is the scam. Those surveys and app-install offers pay the scammer per completion and never deliver rolls. A real Dice Dreams link never asks you to verify anything — it just opens the game and credits the rolls.
Where's the safest place to find working links?
SuperPlay's official Dice Dreams Facebook and Instagram, or an aggregator like ours that only republishes those exact official links, date-checked. We never post generator links — see our daily page.