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How to Play Aviator

Aviator is a crash-style game built around a rising multiplier. Each round starts near 1x and climbs upward until the plane disappears. The player wins only if they cash out before the crash point.

The game is easy to understand, but it becomes risky quickly because every extra second of waiting can increase the payout target while also increasing the chance of losing the entire stake.

The usual round flow is:

  1. Choose a stake before takeoff.
  2. Wait for the multiplier to start rising.
  3. Cash out manually, or let an auto cash-out setting do it.
  4. If the round crashes first, the stake is lost.

The key rule is simple: no cash-out means no win.

For a first learning session, keep the setup basic:

  1. Use demo mode first if it is available.
  2. Set a small entertainment budget before the session starts.
  3. Pick a low fixed cash-out target such as 1.2x to 1.5x.
  4. Stop after reaching either the planned loss limit or the planned win target.

This does not create a winning system. It only reduces beginner confusion and helps the player avoid emotional decisions.

Manual cash-out gives the player more control, but it also creates more room for hesitation and greed. Auto cash-out can improve discipline because the target is fixed before the round begins.

Use manual cash-out when learning the interface. Use auto cash-out when the goal is to follow a pre-set plan without changing it mid-round.

Common beginner mistakes include:

  • Waiting too long for a bigger multiplier after already having a safe exit point.
  • Increasing stake size after a loss.
  • Treating several low crashes in a row as a sign that a big multiplier is “due.”
  • Assuming a predictor, signal group, or APK can reveal the next result.

None of those habits improves the fairness of the game or changes the randomness of the next round.

Once a reader understands the basic rules, the next useful questions are usually:

  • how demo play compares with real-money play
  • how multipliers affect payout expectations
  • how to size stakes without chasing losses

Those topics are covered in:

This page summarizes and rewrites beginner guidance themes from: