Big Win
x20 collected multipliers
First celebration tier. You see a colourful pop-up when the plane lands and total collected multipliers hit x20 in a single round. Roughly 1 in 50 successful landings.
BGaming · Crash · 97% RTP · No cashout button
You place a bet, tap Spin, and watch. A small plane flies a randomly generated path, picking up multipliers and getting hit by rockets, before either landing safely on a ship or crashing into the water. There’s no Cash Out button. No timing decision. The round resolves on its own — and that’s the point.
Released by BGaming in 2024, Aviamasters won the SiGMA Europe Award for Best Casino Game in 2025 and racked up over a billion social media impressions on the strength of one design call: take the crash-game format and remove the clicking. This guide covers everything: how the mechanic works, what the rockets do, how the speed modes change your session, strategies that help, and how Aviamasters 2 (March 2026) extends the original with x1,000 multipliers and Boosters.
18+ only. T&Cs apply. Gambling can be addictive — please play within your means.
Quick stats
Developer
BGaming
Released
2024
RTP
97%
Volatility
Medium-low
Max multiplier
x250
Max win
€250,000
Min bet
A$0.10
Provably fair
Yes
Stats shown for original Aviamasters (2024). Aviamasters 2 (March 2026) keeps RTP and volatility unchanged but raises max multiplier to x1,000 and adds four Booster symbols and a Safe Landing mode.
The mechanic
Aviamasters takes the visual language of Aviator — a cartoon plane on a flight path — and removes the one decision that defines the crash genre. There’s no Cash Out button. The plane takes off the moment you tap Spin and the flight resolves on its own. You watch.
The path is randomly generated each round, populated with two kinds of objects: multipliers (the good stuff) and rockets (the bad stuff). Multipliers come in two forms — flat values (+1, +2, +5, +10) that add to your round balance, and proportional boosts (x2, x3, x4, x5) that multiply whatever you’ve accumulated. The plane picks them up as it flies through.
Rockets are the only threat. When the plane collides with one, two things happen instantly: your Counter Balance (the round’s accumulated total, displayed above the plane) is divided by 2, and the plane’s trajectory drops downward. A single rocket halves your run; two rockets quarter it; three rockets and you’re mostly hoping for a salvage landing rather than a profit.
The flight ends one of two ways. The plane lands safely on an aircraft carrier or ship — your final Counter Balance is paid out as your win. Or the plane runs out of altitude and crashes into the water — round lost, only the original bet is forfeited. There is no partial outcome.
The interesting part of Aviamasters isn’t the round itself — it’s what you control around the round. Bet size, flight speed, autoplay configuration. Players who treat Aviamasters like Aviator (waiting for a perfect cashout window) get frustrated quickly. Players who treat it like a tightly-controlled autopilot session do better.
What the plane meets
Every Aviamasters round generates a fresh path with these three object types scattered along it. The exact positions and quantities are randomized — you never see the same path twice.
+1, +2, +5, +10
Adds flat amount to round balance
Yellow flat-value pickups along the flight path. These add directly to your Counter Balance — collect a +10 mid-flight and your displayed amount jumps by 10× the bet unit. Common throughout the path.
x2, x3, x4, x5
Multiplies your current round balance
Bigger pickups that multiply whatever you've accumulated so far. Hit a x5 with a moderate balance and you've turned a routine flight into a Mega Win candidate. Rarer than flat pickups.
Rocket
Halves your round balance + plane drops
The threat. Random rockets spawn on the path each round. Contact halves your Counter Balance instantly and pushes the plane downward — toward the water and a failed landing. The only real risk in the game.
Big · Mega · Super Mega
Aviamasters labels exceptional landings with three tiers of pop-up animation. The label doesn’t add any bonus money — your win is whatever the Counter Balance was at landing — but it’s a useful mental marker for what kind of round you just had.
Big Win
x20 collected multipliers
First celebration tier. You see a colourful pop-up when the plane lands and total collected multipliers hit x20 in a single round. Roughly 1 in 50 successful landings.
Mega Win
x40 collected multipliers
Mid celebration tier. x40 in a single round — a strong sequence of pickups without too many rocket hits. Less frequent but very achievable on the original Aviamasters.
Super Mega Win
x80+ collected multipliers
Top celebration tier. The biggest visual fanfare in the game — a sustained run of multipliers, ideally with a couple of x5 boosts and zero rocket hits, ending in a safe landing.
Speed modes
Speed only affects how fast the visual plays out — it does not change RTP, rocket frequency, or multiplier distribution. The choice is purely about session pacing and your tolerance for tilt.
Turtle (slow)
~12 seconds per round
Learning the mechanic, watching how rockets and multipliers spawn. Recommended for first sessions.
Medium
~7 seconds per round
The balanced default. Enough time to follow the flight visually without dragging out sessions.
Fast
~4 seconds per round
Players who know the game and want higher round throughput. Pairs well with Autoplay.
Lightning (very fast)
~2 seconds per round
Adrenaline mode. Use only with strict Autoplay stop limits — bankrolls drain fast at this pace.
How to play
Look in the crash or instant-games section. The BGaming branding should be visible on load. Don't confuse it with Aviator (Spribe) or Lucky Jet — same general category, completely different mechanic.
Default range is A$0.10 to A$200 per round depending on the casino. Use the +/- buttons or type the value directly. As always with high-tempo games, never bet more than 1% of your session bankroll on a single round.
Four options: Turtle, Slow, Medium, Fast, Lightning. Speed only changes the visual pace — RTP, rocket frequency, and multiplier distribution stay identical. Beginners should start on Turtle or Medium.
Unlike Aviator, there's no cashout button to time. The plane launches, follows a randomly generated path, and the round resolves automatically. Your job ends the moment you tap Play.
Above the plane, a number shows your current round balance — starts at your bet, grows as the plane collects flat values and multipliers, halves on every rocket hit. This is the only number that matters.
The flight ends with the plane either landing safely on the ship/aircraft carrier (you win the displayed Counter Balance) or crashing into the water (round lost, only the bet is forfeited). No partial wins.
Set rounds to play, win/loss stop limits, and a single-round big-win threshold. Critical: always set the stop-on-loss before you tap Run. Walking away from a 100-round Autoplay session without stops is the fastest way to lose your bankroll.
Strategies
With no Cash Out button, the strategy space is narrower than other crash games — but that’s also what makes Aviamasters interesting. The decisions move from inside the round to around the round.
If you're coming from Aviator, the instinct to time a cashout is hardwired. Aviamasters doesn't reward that instinct because there's no cashout button. The decisions that matter are bet size, speed, and when to stop the session — not when to click during a round.
With autoplay flights, the size of each bet determines how fast variance plays out. A A$1 bet on Lightning speed runs through a A$100 bankroll in about 200 seconds even before variance starts working against you. A A$0.20 bet stretches the same bankroll to over 16 minutes of action. Pick a bet size that gives you the session length you want.
Aviamasters' mechanic is genuinely different from other crash games — the rocket-halving rule, the speed settings, the absence of cashout. Spend 30 to 50 demo rounds learning how the path objects spawn before betting real money. The demo runs the same maths.
The fast pace makes manual stop-on-tilt very hard. Autoplay stop limits are not optional — set both a max-loss limit and a single-round big-win exit before you start. Even a simple 'stop after losing 50% of starting balance' rule is better than no rule.
The maximum theoretical win is x250 your bet, but reaching it requires a near-perfect path of multipliers with zero rocket hits. With medium-low volatility, most rounds end in modest wins or losses around your bet size. If you need a big win, save Aviamasters 2 for that — it has x1,000 max, but the variance is higher.
Turtle and Slow modes are not for noobs only. Use them deliberately when you want longer sessions and more thinking time. Lightning mode is great for short bursts and absolute murder for long sessions — the dopamine cycle is fast enough to override budget discipline.
Common mistakes
Trying to find a 'cash out earlier' equivalent
Why it costs you: There isn't one. The flight resolves on its own. Your bet is locked the moment you tap Play. Players coming from Aviator sometimes try to bet smaller as a substitute for early cashout, but that just changes the unit — not the variance pattern. Accept the format and adjust your decisions accordingly.
Using Lightning speed without Autoplay stops
Why it costs you: At Lightning pace, you'll run through 100+ rounds before you have time to consciously decide to stop. By the time you 'feel' you should quit, the bankroll is already cut in half. If you're playing on Lightning, the stop limits do the discipline for you — don't override them when you're up.
Doubling stakes after losses (Martingale)
Why it costs you: Each round is independent. The plane doesn't 'owe' you a win after a streak of crashes. The provably-fair seed for round N+1 has no connection to round N. Doubling up exponentially raises the loss when the streak continues, which it sometimes does.
Reading the round history for patterns
Why it costs you: Past flights show what happened, not what will happen. The path objects (multipliers, rockets) are placed by RNG independently each round. Streaks of crashes, streaks of wins — both are statistically expected and predictively meaningless.
Aviamasters 2
Released 5 March 2026, Aviamasters 2 keeps the core mechanic that made the original viral and adds four Booster symbols, a Safe Landing buy-in mode, and a higher max multiplier. Both games run alongside each other at most casinos.
| Feature | Aviamasters | Aviamasters 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Released | 2024 | 5 March 2026 |
| Max multiplier | x250 | x1,000 |
| Max win | €250,000 | €250,000 |
| RTP | 97% | 97% (unchanged) |
| Volatility | Medium-low | Medium-low (unchanged) |
| Boosters | None | 4 (Magnet, Laser Gun, Nitro, Life Buoy) |
| Safe Landing mode | Not available | Yes (50× bet to guarantee landing) |
| Speed settings | 4 modes | 4 modes (slightly tweaked) |
Released
Original
2024
Sequel
5 March 2026
Max multiplier
Original
x250
Sequel
x1,000
Max win
Original
€250,000
Sequel
€250,000
RTP
Original
97%
Sequel
97% (unchanged)
Volatility
Original
Medium-low
Sequel
Medium-low (unchanged)
Boosters
Original
None
Sequel
4 (Magnet, Laser Gun, Nitro, Life Buoy)
Safe Landing mode
Original
Not available
Sequel
Yes (50× bet to guarantee landing)
Speed settings
Original
4 modes
Sequel
4 modes (slightly tweaked)
FAQ
Aviamasters is a crash-style casual casino game developed in-house by BGaming, a Malta-licensed iGaming studio. It was released in 2024 and quickly went viral — over a billion social media impressions and the SiGMA Europe Award for Best Casino Game in 2025. The mechanic: you place a bet, tap Spin, and watch a small plane fly along a randomized path, collecting multipliers and dodging rockets, before either landing safely on a ship (win) or crashing into the water (loss). A sequel, Aviamasters 2, released in March 2026 with a max multiplier raised from x250 to x1,000.
The key difference: Aviamasters has no cashout button. In Aviator (Spribe), you tap Cash Out before the plane crashes to lock in the multiplier. In Aviamasters, the round resolves automatically — the plane flies a path, picks up multipliers, gets hit by rockets, and either lands or crashes on its own. Your decisions in Aviamasters are bet size, flight speed, and Autoplay configuration — not click timing. Different game, different skill set.
97% — meaning the house edge is 3%. This is among the better RTPs in the crash-game category (compared to Plinko's 97% and Aviator's 97%). The 97% figure is fixed across all speed modes and all bet sizes — only the variance changes. Aviamasters 2 (the sequel) also has 97% RTP. RTP is a long-term statistical average and tells you nothing about any specific session.
On the original Aviamasters, the maximum theoretical multiplier is x250 your bet. At maximum bet (A$200), this caps the round payout around A$50,000. On Aviamasters 2, the ceiling rose to x1,000 with a maximum payout of €250,000. Reaching the max is statistically rare — most rounds end with smaller wins or losses near the bet size, which is consistent with the medium-low volatility profile.
Rockets are the only real threat in the game. They appear randomly along the plane's path each round, and contact has two effects: your Counter Balance (the round's running total) is divided by 2 instantly, and the plane's altitude drops, making a water crash more likely. You can't avoid rockets through skill — they're placed by RNG and the plane's path is fixed once Spin is tapped. Multiple rocket hits in a single round can turn a strong run into a complete loss.
These are celebratory tiers triggered when your final landed Counter Balance reaches certain multiples of the bet. Big Win triggers at x20 collected multipliers; Mega Win at x40; Super Mega Win at x80. They don't add bonus money — they just trigger a more elaborate animation and pop-up when the plane lands. The actual cash payout is whatever the Counter Balance was at landing.
Yes. BGaming runs an official demo on bgaming.com, and most casinos that host the game also offer a free demo mode. The demo uses virtual credits but runs the identical RNG and rocket frequency as the real-money version. Recommended approach: 30-50 demo rounds at Medium speed before betting real money — enough to see how flat values, multipliers, and rockets interact.
Yes. BGaming's Aviamasters uses a provably fair RNG with cryptographic seeding. Before each round, the game generates a server seed that's hashed and shown to you (without revealing the seed itself). Your client seed combines with it to determine the path. After the round, the original seed is revealed, and you can verify it matches the original hash to confirm the path wasn't manipulated mid-round. This is stronger than standard RNG audits because it lets you verify each round individually.
Aviamasters (the original) suits players who want simpler crash mechanics with a cap of x250. Aviamasters 2 adds four Booster symbols (Magnet, Laser Gun, Nitro, Life Buoy), a Safe Landing buy-in mode (50× bet to guarantee a successful landing), and a higher x1,000 multiplier ceiling. Both have 97% RTP. Aviamasters 2 is better for players who want more variance and bigger ceilings; the original is cleaner for short focused sessions. If your casino has both, try the demos and pick what feels right.
Yes. Aviamasters is built in HTML5 and runs in any modern mobile browser — iOS Safari, Android Chrome, Firefox, Edge. The game scales properly to portrait orientation, with the bet panel and speed controls at the bottom of the screen. Autoplay works the same on mobile. There's no separate Aviamasters app from BGaming; if you find one in app stores, it's an unofficial clone — usually safe but not running BGaming's official RNG.
Try Aviamasters at Spinago.
Demo first, no registration. Real money play comes with A$7,500 + 500 free spins welcome. Withdrawals in under 10 minutes via PayID.
18+ only. T&Cs apply. Crash games are high-variance — never bet more than you’d be comfortable losing. See our responsible gambling guide. AU support: 1800 858 858 · betstop.gov.au. Last updated: 24 April 2026.