Just use the Stirling formula $n! \sim \sqrt{2\pi n} (n/e)^n$ for large $n$ and neglect the $\sqrt{2\pi n}$ factor for a while. That gives us a good estimate for your expression $(3n-1)! / [ (n-1)!(2n)! ] \sim (2n)^{-2n}(n-1)^{1-n} (3n-1)^{3n-1} $ Note that the powers of $e$ cancel. For large $n$, you may also approximate the bases of the powers simply by $2n,n,3n$, respectively. Then you get $\sim 2^{-2n} 3^{3n} = (27/4)^{n} $ because the powers of $n$ cancel, too. Note that $27/4 = 6.75$. I have only calculated the estimate - which is actually a better result because it shows that the number $6.75$ is exact in the large $n$ limit. To prove the inequality, you have to carefully watch whether the Stirling formula underestimates or overestimates it. At any rate, it's straightforward to check that the inequality holds for any positive $n$.
It's enough to check it explicitly for a few first small values of $n$, and for larger ones, it can be shown that the $(27/4)^n$ Ansatz is being approached from the right side by computing the sign of the first subleading correction to this approximation. If you enumerate the first few binomial coefficients over the approximation (which should be smaller than one) by Mathematica
[Table[Binomial[3 n - 1, n - 1]/(27/4)^n, {n, 1, 20}]]
you will get
{0.14814815, 0.10973937, 0.091043032, 0.079482012, 0.071435685, 0.06542258, 0.060709598, 0.056887142, 0.053706089, 0.051005081, 0.048674402, 0.046636504, 0.04483482, 0.043226987, 0.041780567, 0.040470244, 0.039275935, 0.038181474, 0.037173681, 0.036241691}
The numbers are clearly smaller than one, and from the beginning, the decrease is uniform.
For your case of $d$ dimensions, the relevant surviving terms are replaced by $ \sim (2d-2)^{(2-2d)(n-1)} (2d-1)^{(2d-1)(n-1)} $ so $27/4$ gets replaced by $(2d-1)^{2d-1}/(2d-2)^{2d-2}$. For $d=2$, you get $3^3/2^2 = 27/4$. For $d=3$, you would get $5^5/4^4$, and so on.
Note that the proof only works for 27/4 = 6.75. This number couldn't be reduced further (6.25 is a typo) and any proof that replaces 6.75 by a larger number fails to prove the original assertion.