If you want to know which Canadian casino has the biggest game library, this ranking of 9 brands by slot count gives you a clear answer. The nine properties covered here range from smaller regional venues with under 300 machines to Ontario’s largest resort, which has more than 3,500 slots. Slot count drives most of the differences between these brands, though table games and live dealer options also factor into each property’s total library size. By the end, you’ll have a solid basis for comparing your options and knowing where the largest selection actually sits.
How Game Library Size Is Measured Across Canadian Casino Brands
Library size across the nine ranked brands isn’t a single, uniform figure. Total game count and slot-specific count are two different things, but they often appear together in published data for the same property, and they can tell very different stories about what a brand actually offers. The number of providers a casino works with is what really drives how large either figure gets, so you need two separate lenses to read this ranking accurately.
Slot Count Versus Total Game Library
Slot count is a part of total library size, not the same thing as it. A brand’s headline “game library” figure usually bundles multiple categories into one number, which means a claim of “X,000 games” can describe a very different product depending on how many of those titles are slots versus other formats. If you treat the headline figure as a stand-in for slot depth, you’ll end up with a misleading comparison across the nine brands in this ranking.
The categories typically bundled into total library counts are:
- Slots, the largest single category and the primary ranking metric.
- Table games, blackjack, roulette, baccarat variants.
- Live dealer tables, a separate count in most published figures.
- Specialty formats, dice, bingo, keno, craps.
- Poker variants, video poker and dedicated poker rooms.
Why Provider Diversity Determines Library Size
The number of software and game providers a casino works with is what actually drives library size. Each provider brings its own catalogue of slots and live dealer tables, so a broader provider roster directly produces a higher title count. That’s why two brands with similar floor space or operating budgets can publish very different totals. A large published number signals provider breadth, not a guarantee that all those titles are unique or non-overlapping.
The Nine Canadian Casino Brands Ranked by Slot Count
The ranking below orders nine Canadian casino brands strictly by slot count, from largest to smallest, using figures from official property sources and investor records. Where a total game library figure differs meaningfully from the slot count, that distinction is noted in the entry. The top brand sits well above every other brand in this ranking. Each brand gets its own entry below.
Rank 1, Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort (Ontario)
Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort in Niagara Falls, Ontario, reports over 3,500 slot machines on its gaming floor. The property’s own FAQ cites that figure, while its homepage cites over 3,200. The gaming floor spans roughly 200,000 sq. ft. and includes 110 gaming tables. A slot count this size reflects both the physical capacity of a large dedicated gaming floor and the range of machine suppliers contracted to fill it. No other single property in this ranking comes close to that combination of floor scale and slot volume, which is why this figure sits at the top by a clear margin.
Rank 2, Casino de Montréal (Quebec)
Casino de Montréal, operated by Loto-Québec, reports over 3,000 slot machines and 84 gaming tables. The property is identified as the largest casino in Canada by floor space and ranks among the largest casinos in the world. Floor space and slot count don’t scale in strict proportion: a larger physical footprint can hold a comparable or smaller slot library depending on how the space is split across gaming formats, non-gaming amenities, and table layouts. Casino de Montréal shows that directly. Its floor space exceeds Fallsview’s, yet its reported slot count is lower.
Rank 3, Casino Rama Resort (Ontario)
Casino Rama Resort in central Ontario reports over 2,500 slot machines and more than 110 gaming tables. Its floor space isn’t confirmed in available authoritative sources. Sitting third in this ranking, Casino Rama’s slot count is roughly 700 machines below Casino de Montréal’s reported figure and more than 1,000 below the leader. Its table-game roster of over 110 tables is comparable to the two brands above it, so the gap between Rank 3 and the top two is mainly a slot-count gap, not a table-game gap.
Rank 4, Caesars Windsor (Ontario)
Caesars Windsor in Windsor, southwestern Ontario, reports 1,180 slot machines, 140 table games, and 111,300 sq. ft. of casino space. The drop from the top three is significant: the slot count here is less than half of Casino Rama’s reported figure. Caesars Windsor’s table-game count of 140 is the highest in this ranking, which reflects a deliberate format mix rather than a smaller overall library. The gap between the top-three cluster and this entry marks the practical dividing line between destination-scale slot libraries and mid-tier ones.
Rank 5, River Cree Resort & Casino (Alberta)
River Cree Resort & Casino in Alberta reports 1,665 slot machines and 46 table games. A verified floor-space figure isn’t available from authoritative sources. River Cree ranks fifth by slot count despite sitting outside Ontario and Quebec, the provinces that hold the top three positions. Its slot count of 1,665 exceeds Caesars Windsor’s 1,180, so it ranks above Caesars Windsor on slots alone even though Caesars Windsor has a much larger table-game roster. That inversion reinforces the point that slot count and table-game count measure different things.
Rank 6, Casino Niagara (Ontario)
Casino Niagara in the Niagara region of Ontario reports over 1,300 slot machines (including video poker machines, with more than 350 identified as progressive slots) and 30 gaming tables across 95,000 sq. ft. of gaming space. Its table-game count of 30 is noticeably lower than Rank 5’s 46, even though Casino Niagara ranks higher on slot count. A property can rank higher on slots while ranking lower on table-game variety, and Casino Niagara shows that directly. What counts as a larger “library” at this level depends on which format you’re measuring.
Rank 7, River Rock Casino Resort (British Columbia)
River Rock Casino Resort in British Columbia, operated under the Great Canadian Entertainment group, reports 500 slot machines and 20 live table games. A verified floor-space figure isn’t available from authoritative sources. River Rock ranks seventh by slot count, well below Casino Niagara’s reported figure of over 1,300. Its table-game count of 20 is also lower than Casino Niagara’s 30, so this entry doesn’t flip the slot-to-table ratio seen at Rank 6. Readers focused on table-game volume would rank this property below several others in the mid-tier of the field.
Rank 8, Elements Casino Brantford (Ontario)
Elements Casino Brantford in southern Ontario reports 550 slot machines, 34 table games, and 30,000 sq. ft. of floor space. Its slot count of 550 is roughly one-sixth of the leader’s reported figure, putting it in a different category from the destination-scale properties at the top of this ranking. At this scale, the property works as a regional venue rather than a resort destination, and the floor-space figure of 30,000 sq. ft. reflects that. Its table-game count of 34 exceeds River Rock’s 20, which again shows that slot rank and table-game rank don’t move together.
Rank 9, St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino / Casino of the Rockies (British Columbia)
St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino, also known as Casino of the Rockies, is located in the interior of British Columbia and reports 240 slots, 4 table games, and 19,000 sq. ft. of floor space. This entry defines the bottom of the ranked field. The gap from this property’s 240 slots to the leader’s reported figure of over 3,500 represents the full range of slot-library scale across the nine brands in this comparison. At 4 table games, this property also has the smallest table-game count in the ranking by a wide margin.
Side-by-Side Comparison of All Nine Brands
The table below pulls together the ranked figures for all nine properties so you can read the full field at a glance and see the practical gap between each rank in one view. Where a range appears in the source data, the range is kept. Where a floor-space figure couldn’t be confirmed from an authoritative source, the cell reflects that absence rather than carrying an unverified figure.
| Rank | Brand | Province | Slot Count | Table Games | Floor Space |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Niagara Fallsview Casino Resort | Ontario | 3,200–3,500+ | ~110 | ~200,000 sq. ft. |
| 2 | Casino de Montréal | Quebec | Over 3,000 | 84 | Not confirmed |
| 3 | Casino Rama Resort | Ontario | Over 2,500 | 110+ | Not confirmed |
| 4 | River Cree Resort & Casino | Alberta | 1,665 | 46 | Not confirmed |
| 5 | Caesars Windsor | Ontario | 1,180 | 140 | 111,300 sq. ft. |
| 6 | Casino Niagara | Ontario | Over 1,300 | 30 | 95,000 sq. ft. |
| 7 | River Rock Casino Resort | British Columbia | 500 | 20 | Not confirmed |
| 8 | Elements Casino Brantford | Ontario | 550 | 34 | 30,000 sq. ft. |
| 9 | St. Eugene Golf Resort & Casino / Casino of the Rockies | British Columbia | 240 | 4 | 19,000 sq. ft. |
How Live Dealer Tables Reshape the Library Comparison
Live dealer table counts appear alongside slot counts as a separate dimension of library size in Canadian casino data, not as a subset of the slot figure. A property’s slot count and its live dealer count measure separate things: one reflects machine procurement, the other reflects streaming infrastructure and studio partnerships. If you care about live dealer coverage, you can’t use the slot-count ranking as a stand-in for live dealer depth, because the two metrics don’t move together across the nine brands.
How Live Dealer Counts Are Structured
Live dealer tables are studio-hosted or floor-hosted table games broadcast in real time to players. Their count is reported separately from software-based titles because they require dedicated physical or streaming infrastructure rather than a software licence. A live dealer count reflects the number of active broadcast tables a property can run at the same time, which is limited by studio capacity and staffing rather than catalogue size. When a total library figure includes live dealer tables, that part of the number describes streaming capacity and operator partnerships. It does not represent additional slot titles bundled into the count.
Why Live Dealer Coverage Can Reorder the Ranking
A brand ranked lower on slot count can hold a much higher position on live dealer breadth, because the two formats scale through entirely different procurement processes. Canadian operator groups show this at the organisational level: Great Canadian Entertainment, for example, reports over 600 live table games across its portfolio. That figure dwarfs the live dealer count of any single property in this ranking and shows that live dealer scale is often an organisational characteristic rather than a per-venue one. Before treating headline totals as comparable, check which metric a source is actually using.
- Slot-count rank does not predict live dealer rank, the two metrics track independent supply chains.
- Group-level totals differ from single-property totals, aggregate figures across a parent operator can dwarf any single venue.
- Published “total games” claims may bundle both, meaning identical headline numbers can describe very different libraries.
How Online Canadian Casino Libraries Compare to Land-Based Slot Counts
Online Canadian casino libraries are published on a much larger scale than the land-based slot counts covered in the ranking above. Figures cited in source data range from roughly 600 titles at the low end to over 9,000 at the high end, a spread that far exceeds the 240-to-3,500 range across the nine land-based properties. This difference is structural: online libraries grow through software provider agreements rather than physical floor space, so their upper limit isn’t constrained by square footage or machine procurement. Canadian online operation rests on provincial authority under federal law, which means library figures are published by provincially authorised operators rather than under a single national regulatory framework.
The Reported Range of Online Library Sizes
Online libraries grow by adding provider agreements rather than floor space, which is why the reported range spans such a wide gap. Each additional software provider a platform signs with adds its full catalogue to the total count, so a platform with twenty provider agreements can list multiples of what a platform with five agreements can offer. An online figure and a land-based slot count are measuring different things. One reflects machine procurement within a fixed physical space; the other reflects the combined output of contracted software catalogues with no physical ceiling.
- Low end of the reported range, figures around 600 titles.
- Mid-range figures, approximately 3,500 titles described in source data as curated rather than exhaustive.
- Upper mid-range, figures above 4,500 titles.
- High end of the reported range, figures approaching or exceeding 7,000 to 9,000 titles, inclusive of slots, dice, bingo, keno, craps, poker, and live dealer formats.
The Provincial Basis for Canadian Online Casino Operation
Section 207(1)(a) of the Criminal Code authorises a province to conduct and manage a lottery scheme, including in a permanent establishment held out to be a casino. That’s why online library figures in Canada are reported by provincially authorised operators rather than by a single national regulator. A library figure published by an Ontario-authorised platform reflects that province’s operator arrangements, while a figure from a Quebec-authorised platform reflects Loto-Québec’s distinct framework. When comparing online library totals across Canadian operators, the figures sit within different provincial regulatory structures rather than under a common national standard.
Reading Canadian Casino Library Figures With a Clearer Eye
Slot count and total library size are not the same measurement, and treating a published headline figure as a stand-in for either one produces a distorted comparison across Canadian properties. A figure that bundles slots, table games, live dealer tables, and specialty formats into a single number describes a different product from a figure that isolates slot machines alone. Land-based slot counts and online title counts also operate on entirely different scales for structural reasons that have nothing to do with operator size. Knowing which metric a source is using is the first step to reading any Canadian casino library claim accurately.