Frontend role: casino UIs
A hiring post is looking for frontend engineers to build casino-style games (crash, dice, mines) using Next.js, TypeScript, Tailwind and server-sent events, and it offers equity and token compensation. The listing points to demand for real-time UI skills in gaming/Web3 stacks and shows companies still using token-equity mixes to attract frontend talent. (x.com)
A hiring post from ExoHash is recruiting frontend engineers to build browser casino games, using a stack centered on Next.js, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS and server-sent events. (x.com) The post names three game formats — crash, dice and mines — and says compensation includes equity and tokens rather than cash alone. Search results tied to the listing did not surface a public salary range or office location. (x.com) Crash, dice and mines are fast, round-based gambling interfaces where the screen has to update instantly as odds, timers or revealed tiles change. Server-sent events are one-way live feeds over Hypertext Transfer Protocol, which let a server push updates to the browser as they happen. (developer.mozilla.org) That makes frontend work central to the product, not decorative around it. Next.js splits work between server and browser components, while Tailwind CSS is a utility-first styling framework, so the stack fits teams shipping interactive interfaces quickly. (nextjs.org) (developer.mozilla.org) The role also sits inside a broader hiring market for online gambling software. Indeed listed 963 online casino frontend developer jobs in a recent crawl, and specialist recruiters are still advertising roles across game development, backend platforms and betting products. (indeed.com) (ingamerecruitment.com) Other employers are posting similar work. Ruby Seven Studios is hiring a frontend engineer for casino game content, and BGaming is advertising a frontend developer role for online casino products. (rubyseven.com) (bgaming.com) The token piece is more specific to crypto-linked gaming startups. ExoHash’s post suggests some companies are still mixing ownership claims and digital-token upside to compete for engineers with real-time user-interface skills. (x.com) Public code and product pages show the same design pattern elsewhere in crypto gambling: browser frontends for games like crash, dice and limbo, paired with wallet connections and live game state. Those examples do not prove ExoHash’s product roadmap, but they show the stack in the post matches an existing niche of Web3 casino software. (github.com) (mintdice.com) What the listing makes plain is that one of the oldest internet businesses is still hiring for one of the newest frontend mixes: real-time web interfaces, modern React tooling and crypto-flavored pay packages. (x.com)