Aviator is a crash game: you place a bet, a multiplier climbs as the plane flies, and you cash out before it flies away. Cash out in time and you win your stake times the multiplier; wait too long and the stake is gone. It is one of two independent crash games on Fish & Chips (the other is Submarine Dive), and like all of them it is provably fair — the crash point is fixed before you bet and verifiable afterward.
TL;DR: Set a cash-out target before each round, use auto cash-out and auto-bet to stay consistent, flat-stake a small fraction of your bankroll, and never chase. No strategy beats a pre-committed crash curve.
How the round is decided
When betting closes, the crash point is already locked in by a pre-committed seed chain. The server is not deciding mid-flight; the curve you watch is just the reveal of a number that already exists. That is what makes Aviator verifiable — read the provably-fair Aviator explainer for how to check a round using the genesis tip and the per-round verifier.
The consequence for strategy: because the outcome is fixed and the long-run return is set, no betting progression can change your expected value. "The plane is due for a high one" is a feeling, not a fact.
Choose a cash-out target and stick to it
| Style | Typical target | Hit rate | Feel |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 1.3x – 1.7x | High | Steady small wins |
| Balanced | 1.8x – 2.5x | Medium | Wins and misses mixed |
| Aggressive | 3x and up | Low | Rare big multipliers, long droughts |
All three return the same in the long run. The point of choosing one is consistency — switching targets based on the last few rounds is how players talk themselves into bad cash-outs.
Automate to remove the leaks
Aviator supports auto cash-out (exit automatically at your target) and auto-bet (place the same stake each round). Together they remove hesitation and lag, the two ways manual play quietly costs you. They also keep your approach steady enough to judge honestly.
A common two-lane setup: an auto-bet at a low cash-out for a steady base, plus an occasional manual high-target shot when you want a swing. Keep the swing stake tiny.
Bankroll rules that actually help
- Flat stake 1% to 2% of your bankroll per round; avoid martingale doubling.
- Set a session budget and walk when you reach it.
- Withdraw profit instead of feeding it back into the next round.
- Never chase a loss — variance is not a debt the game owes you.
- Use the in-app deposit limits for a hard ceiling.
Aviator is fast, transparent, and fun on the right terms. Play it at /aviator, browse the full lineup on the games hub, or compare with the Submarine Dive crash strategy guide.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a winning Aviator strategy?
No system changes the math. Each round crashes at a point fixed by a pre-committed seed before betting closes, so no pattern or progression shifts your expected value. Strategy only manages variance, discipline, and how long your bankroll lasts.
Should I cash out early or late in Aviator?
Early targets (around 1.3x to 1.7x) win often but pay little; late targets (3x and up) pay big but rarely land. They share the same long-run return, so pick the rhythm you prefer and stay consistent with it.
Can I verify an Aviator round was fair?
Yes. Aviator publishes a genesis tip and a per-round verifier so you can confirm the crash point came from the pre-committed seed chain and was not changed after you bet. See our provably-fair Aviator explainer.
How is Aviator different from Submarine Dive crash?
They are two fully separate crash games with their own engines and round histories. The play pattern — bet, watch the multiplier climb, cash out before it crashes — is the same, and both are provably fair.