How to Play Aviamasters
Crash Game
A step-by-step guide to setting your bet, how tokens work, the speed controls, the autoplay setting, and some of the options that many first-time players ignore in the first few rounds.
// Contents
// Everything You Need to Get Started
Most crash game tutorials show you what’s already in front of you: the bet box, the spinning icon, the odds multiplier. The goal here is to go deeper. To describe what each feature actually means, why you should not be startled by what happens to the counter, and what beginners typically get confused about in those first several rounds.
If it’s your first time playing a crash game, follow the guide from start to finish. If you’ve been playing a few rounds and you’re not quite clear on one point, just scroll down until you find it. In either case, the free version is available now, and you can play it immediately. Everything in this guide is something that you can find in the free version. Open it on a second screen if that works for you.
// Before You Start: What You're Looking At
This game offers more screen space for atmosphere than for the game itself. The sky, the runway, the deck – most of it’s there to create an atmosphere. These are what you need to pay attention to:
The flight screen occupies most of the space. This is where you’ll watch the plane go and where you’ll see the odds counter update as each round progresses. Keep your eyes on this area whenever a round is happening.
The bet box and spin icon are at the bottom. Set your stake with one click and go. The game info, game history, and game controls are on the right. Don’t ignore those options; all three of them can come in handy. The game controls, in particular, have a few settings that most people never bother using.
Everything else is part of the game's theme.
The theme is well done, but if you don’t yet know how to play the game, you can’t really appreciate it.
// Setting Your Bet
Set your bet in the bottom centre. Tap +/-, click the field and type, or use quick-bet options if they’re available.
Minimum bet is $0.10. Your maximum is whatever the operator sets for you.
But before you choose a stake level, one thing to know is this:
Your bet equals the initial value of the counter. If you bet $1.00, the round starts with $1.00 on the counter. Additive (+$X) tokens give you flat dollar amounts to add. Multipliers (X1.5, X2.0, etc.) give you the current counter times a specific multiplier. In other words, how much a multiplier is worth depends on the counter value when that multiplier hits.
So bet choice matters on two fronts: bet determines your base stake, and so it scales your multiplier; also, bet determines if and when the additive tokens matter. A +$10 token on a $0.20 bet is huge. On a $15 bet, you’d barely notice. Additive and multiplier tokens are not the same thing at every bet.
Starting range for new players:
$0.25–$0.50 per round. This range is big enough to make some of your decisions matter, and low enough that you don’t drain your bankroll too fast before you’ve had a chance to see the normal range of results.
// Hitting Spin: What Happens Next
Tap spin and the round will begin. The plane departs from the left and flies across your screen. Various tokens are located on the plane’s trajectory, with some boosting your counter, others multiplying it, and one dividing it in half.
As the plane flies over a token, your counter will immediately update. The number above your plane as it flies is your life counter – the amount you would collect if the round ended then.
A round ends in one of two ways:
✅
Safe landing
The plane lands. You collect whatever value your counter was when the round ended.
💥
Crash
The plane crashes, and the round ends. No payout is paid out, even if your counter was a large number in the middle of the round.
// Understanding the Counter Balance
This is the single biggest stumbling block for new players, so please read it carefully.
Your counter is not your winnings; it’s your total payout. If you bet $1.00, your counter starts at $1.00. If the counter reaches $4.20 when the plane lands, you collect $4.20. Your net profit for the round is $3.20, and not $4.20.
This is what trips people up: your counter value can end the round below your original bet. If the rocket token appears early and your $1.00 counter drops to $0.40, and then your plane lands safely at a counter value of $0.40, you collect $0.40. This round counts as a win because the round didn’t end in a crash; however, you still took a loss on the round because you only collected $0.40 but staked $1.00. The game rules account for this possibility. It is not an app malfunction.
The first time this happens, you'll think it's a glitch.
It’s not. The counter is intentionally built to allow the counter value to end lower than the original bet if the rocket token appears early in a round. Accepting the counter value being lower than your original bet from round one will help you adjust your reaction the next time it happens.
// The Multiplier Tokens: What Each One Does
Five token types help your counter. One doesn’t:
+1, +2, +5, +10
Adds the indicated dollar amount to the counter regardless of your bet amount. A token adding $5.00 to your counter is worth $5 regardless of whether you bet $0.50 or $50.00.
×2 through ×5
Multiplies the current value of your counter by the indicated value. These work well with large balances. If you have a $1.00 balance and collect the ×4 multiplier token, you'll have a balance of $4.00. If you have an $8.00 balance and collect the same token, you'll have a balance of $32.00.
The rocket
This token halves your balance. The rules acknowledge the existence of the rocket token and explicitly state that there may be more than one per round. Take this into consideration when determining your bet strategy.
Practical implication:
It's worth noting that while the counter balance will fluctuate by the additive tokens throughout a round, the multiplier tokens will only have an effect at the multiplier values listed and won't add anything to the total counter value. It doesn't matter if you collect ×5 when your balance is only $0.30; the ×5 token will only be worth $1.50. However, if you collect ×5 when your balance is $9.00, that same token is worth $45.00.
See the tokens in action
The best way to experience the effects of the additive and multiplier tokens and the rocket token is to see them hit your balance in a round. It won’t cost you a penny, and Demo mode has a 10-second countdown timer.
See the tokens in action
The fastest way to learn +1, +5, ×3 and the rocket is to watch them hit your counter in real time. Demo mode costs nothing.
// Speed Settings: Finding the Right Pace
Four game speeds are located at the bottom of the game screen. They affect the pace at which the aircraft traverses the course, never the round mechanics or results.
🐢
Speed 1 – Slowest
Tokens are fully revealed as they strike the tally before they land. Use this and don't switch until you can instantly recognize any token.
🚶
Speed 2 – Default
A healthy mix of tempo and clarity. The pace is brisk enough to endure for a long time and gentle enough to keep all key information in view. Good choice for players who use mostly manual controls.
🐇
Speed 3 - Rabbit
Quite a bit faster. Rounds wind down quickly while token identification requires a little more scrutiny. Suitable for those who use the game in autoplay mode and who have a solid understanding of the game.
⚡
Speed 4 – Fastest
Rounds finish in a matter of seconds. By this rate, you're only watching results and not making any choices. Acceptable only when autoplay is on, and the stop conditions are configured. The fastest setting is for autoplay only. Playing the game manually at this speed is what wipes out bankrolls with little fanfare.
At faster speeds, the quality of the game degrades. Once you stop seeing what happens in a round, you lose the chance to see if something is wrong, and you lose the benefit of the slowing game to keep you on your toes.
// The Autoplay Feature: How to Use It
To use the autoplay feature, click on the Auto button below the round’s Spin button and specify how many rounds to run as well as conditions for ending autoplay early.
Stop conditions – set at least one before starting every autoplay session:
Win
Autoplay will stop after any round with a win of any size.
Win over X
Autoplay will stop if the payout of any single round exceeds $X.
Balance increase by X
Autoplay will stop if your balance rises by $X from your balance at the start.
Balance decrease by X
Autoplay will stop if your balance falls $X from your balance at the start. This is your loss limit, and you should ALWAYS have it set before you start.
Always set the balance decrease condition.
Once a session goes south, the urge to “keep going” is most intense when that decision is made hardest by emotion. Having a balance decrease limit set removes that decision from play.
When autoplay runs out, stops as the result of a stop condition, or is stopped before it’s finished, it returns to manual play. The autoplay settings don’t persist; you must set them before starting any future autoplay. The pause that you will have before you continue is a good time to stop and think.
// Customizing the Interface
There are a few settings you can change that are easy to ignore, but are helpful in other ways:
📍
Spin button position
The spin button can be relocated anywhere on the screen. On mobile, placing the spin button within arm's reach allows you to click it immediately after the end of the round.
🔲
Button size and opacity
You can resize the button or make it transparent should it fall on top of the flight path. On smaller screens, the default button location can make it hard to see which tokens have landed.
🔊
Sound controls
These controls are separate. The sound of a token being taken off the board is useful; you don't have to watch the game to see if you have landed a token. It's a common opinion that the music in this game is annoying, and most folks turn it off entirely.
⚡
In-round speed changes
You can speed up and slow down at any point. If you think a round has an interesting combination of tokens that would help with strategy, you can just turn up the speed during that round and then put it back down.
// Finding Game History and Rules
On the right-hand side of the interface, you’ll find two buttons you’ll want to keep in mind:
📋
Game History
Displays the last several round results. After your session is finished, take a look at this page to get a good sense of your results and to get a better idea of how many tokens, and what kind, were being used. You likely won't pay much attention to these details while the round is actively being played out.
📄
Rules panel
Check out the official game rules before you play for real money. It has some useful info, for instance, on what happens in the event you get disconnected, and any oddities you need to be aware of with regard to token behavior, as well as how any rounds that are still pending are going to be concluded.
On disconnections:
An open round is terminated 24 hours after an issue arises. If a player attempts to cash out before disconnecting, they receive the win they were expecting. This is an infrequent occurrence, but it’s best to know about it should it happen while you’re playing.
// Playing on Mobile
The mobile experience is actually quite good for Aviamasters. This is a BGaming product, and these tend to work well in all different screen sizes. All you have to do to play it on mobile is load the game via your casino website’s mobile browser, and it will automatically be displayed properly. No need to download any apps.
👆
Touch controls
All buttons are touch-friendly. All you have to do to cash out is tap the relevant button. I like to adjust the position of the spin button before the game starts, to the right of where my thumb will be when playing.
📱
Portrait and landscape
Both are fine, but I think landscape allows for more space to see the whole flight path and helps me to spot those little tokens better when they're zooming by quickly.
📶
Connection quality
Aviamasters is not a single-frame game. It is a live game, so you will see stutters when you don't have a good internet connection. I prefer Wi-Fi, especially for longer gaming sessions.
⚠️
No official app
This is a website-based game and, to my knowledge, Aviamasters has no mobile app. Any other APK files you see claiming to be a mobile app for this game are illegal imitations, so don't bother downloading. Only play from your casino provider's verified site.
// The Demo Version: What It Does and Doesn't Give You
The demo version is the actual game with all its features and functionality, minus the real money. You get an initial supply of fake credits, and these refresh automatically every time you refresh the page.
✅
What demo mode provides
A sense of the interface and mechanics A better understanding of all of the different token types and their effects A familiarity with the game's speed settings An idea of typical frequencies for rockets and a general sense of multipliers
❌
What demo mode can't provide
The pressure of playing for real money The temptation to try to chase losses How you actually handle variance A true picture of your discipline
I recommend playing the demo for at least two to three gaming sessions before switching to playing with real money. You don’t need to do this to find any winning streaks or to try to figure out any winning patterns, but you need to know the buttons and mechanics by memory so you’re not distracted by them in the actual game.
// A Typical First Session: What to Expect
If this is your first session playing Aviamasters, this is likely going to be what you’ll go through:
- Most rounds will have a low multiplier: lots of 1×–3× cashout values. Wins, but small ones.
- On occasion, a rocket may launch while your counter is still ascending, causing it to drop. This is standard gameplay.
- You can reasonably expect to encounter one or two rounds where the elements align, allowing you to achieve a higher multiplier.
- Eventually, you will experience a streak of 3 to 5 consecutive losses. This is expected in a medium-volatility game.
- You’ll finish your session with either a slight win or a slight loss because you chose to stop, decided that you reached the number of rounds you wanted, or became distracted.
There won’t be a steady increase in round values building up to some climax. That is not the way it works. Results are jagged and variable. You need to learn to live with the jaggedness—not hope it evens out.
// Common Mistakes to Avoid Early On
Some habits that tend to create trouble within the first couple of sessions:
Betting too high relative to your bankroll.
If your budget is depleted within 10–15 rounds, then you haven't played enough rounds to know what you are doing. Play with lower amounts of money for more rounds.
Not setting a loss threshold in advance.
It is better to plan your decisions ahead of time, rather than make them on the fly under pressure. Before round 1 starts, make sure to set the balance decrease stop condition.
Choosing Speed 4 to start.
It is difficult to learn at full speed. Begin with Speed 2, and keep it on Speed 2 until the tokens feel like second nature.
Considering the rocket a glitch.
If two rockets appear in the same round, and you halve the counter twice, that is documented behavior; don't freak out about it. Treat this as normal, and you will stay calm in your next session.
Ignoring the history panel.
When your session is over, check the round history. There are free clues to the token patterns and how often rockets and different results appear. Check it every time.
Ready for real stakes?
If you have reached the point of familiarity with the game demo, then all of the platforms we recommend above offer Aviamasters with valid certification and stable performance on mobile devices.
// Quick Reference: Controls Summary
Here is a list of all of the elements on the screen and what they do:
Bet field
Select the size of your wager before starting each round. You cannot place or change bets when a round has already begun.
Spin button
Begin a round. This locks your bet to the size it was when you clicked it.
Auto button (A)
Launch autoplay.
Speed 1–4
The speed of the animation. You can change it at any point mid-round.
Settings
Adjust the music volume and the location/size of the Spin button.
History
A record of previous rounds. The history panel is always available, even mid-session.
Rules button
A comprehensive list of official rules, including details about what happens when you lose connection.
Counter balance display
This shows your current potential payout if the round ended. This number is not a profit.
Stop conditions
Available inside of autoplay. The balance decrease option is the best to select before round 1.
You're Ready to Play
First, play a few rounds in demo mode. Then, keep Speed 2 on. Continue playing until your brain stops needing to process what the various buttons do. Then, you can decide if you'd prefer to play for real money.
18+ | Play responsibly | Licensed platforms only
