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Aviator review

The original crash classic — a rising plane and a curve that can stop at any second.

Aviator is a crash-style game where a plane flies across the screen and a multiplier climbs with it. You cash out before the plane disappears — wait too long and the round is lost.

Provider
Spribe
RTP
97%
Volatility
High
Aviator crash game
x2.47
Aviator

How Aviator works

  1. 1Place a bet before the round starts.
  2. 2Watch the multiplier rise as the plane takes off.
  3. 3Press cash out at any time to lock in your current multiplier.
  4. 4If the plane flies away before you cash out, the round is lost.

Pros

  • Simple, transparent mechanics
  • Provably fair round results
  • Fast rounds, mobile-friendly
  • Auto-cashout and auto-bet tools

Cons

  • High volatility — losing streaks are normal
  • Easy to chase losses if undisciplined
  • Not available in every market

Basic strategy

Discipline, not patterns. These tips reduce variance — they do not guarantee wins.

  • Set a session budget before you start and stop when it's spent.
  • Use auto cash-out at low multipliers (1.3x–1.8x) to reduce variance.
  • Split bets: one small bet for low cash-out, one tiny bet to chase higher rounds.
  • Never increase bet size to recover losses — variance does not 'owe' you anything.

Frequently asked

What is Aviator?+

Aviator is a crash-style game where a plane flies across the screen and a multiplier climbs with it. You cash out before the plane disappears — wait too long and the round is lost.

What is the RTP of Aviator?+

Aviator runs at a stated RTP of 97%. That is a long-run average — short sessions vary heavily.

Who makes Aviator?+

Aviator is developed by Spribe.

Is there a winning strategy for Aviator?+

No system can beat a negative-expectation game. The realistic edge is bankroll discipline and pre-set cash-out targets.

Play Aviator from your country

18+

This page is for informational purposes only. Crash games involve real risk of financial loss. There are no guaranteed profits. If you choose to play, set a budget and stop when it's spent. Help is available at begambleaware.org.