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Aviamasters FAQ
Aviamasters
Frequently Asked Questions
An overview of the key Aviamasters mechanics: how the counter works, what the tokens do, demo mode, responsible play, and where to play the game.
// Aviamasters Game Overview
Aviamasters is an Aviator-style casino game from BGaming. The game features a plane that travels across a randomized path, passing by tokens that can either add to or multiply a counter that starts from your bet value. If the plane lands, the final counter value is paid out. If it crashes, the round is lost.
Aviamasters is a studio game developed by BGaming, a licensed casino game studio from Malta that is known for its HTML5 games. The game was launched in July 2024 and is widely available on licensed casino sites.
No. It shares a lobby page with other casino games, including slots, but it doesn't behave like a typical slot. Aviamasters features no reels, no paylines, and no triggerable free spins or bonus rounds. It is based on one main mechanic: a game counter that starts from your chosen bet value. As the plane travels, it passes by token objects that can either increase this value or multiply it.
The outcome of each game round is entirely determined by chance. The plane's flight path and token distribution are randomized. You can't choose whether the plane lands or crashes – only whether you'd like to try a smaller bet size or a larger stake or play for a few minutes or longer.
97%. This theoretical return to player is based on long-run statistics. It means you can expect the game to return, on average, $97 for every $100 wagered over time and across many thousands of rounds. Short-term and session results will vary from the average.
It's a low-volatility title. The title tends to produce more frequent moderate wins rather than rare, bigger prizes. This doesn't mean it is free from variance, only that the game has less volatility than high-variance casino slots.
There is a technical maximum win multiplier cap, but it is so far away that most rounds are resolved well before that value is reached. It serves as a theoretical upper bound, not a likely target to hit.
Yes. It was built on the HTML5 platform for use on web browsers on desktop or mobile devices. It doesn't require a download or installation. The game automatically adjusts to fit the user's device screen.
Yes. It uses certified RNG technology. This technology determines random, independent outcomes that aren't influenced by any previous session's results or the player's stake. Each round is determined by chance in isolation.
Most games in the crash genre involve players watching a multiplier increase over time and placing bets. At the same time, players must cash out their stake before the crash to receive their winnings. Unlike those titles, Aviamasters is based on a counter. Tokens that the player passes along the flight path either add a flat amount or multiply the counter. When the plane passes by the rocket icons, the value in the counter is halved. The game round automatically concludes, so you don't need to worry about when to cash out.
Yes. The game can be played in demo mode on virtual credits. Registration isn't required to play Aviamasters for free. The demo game is a replica of the real version, but the credits used aren't real.
Yes. It's easy to understand the basic gameplay loop. We'd recommend that new players give it a try before staking real money, and using demo mode is the best way to do that. It isn't just to check if the game has good mechanics for your bankroll. You should play some demo rounds to better understand how the game works. It's one thing to read the rules about counters and rockets; it's another to experience how they interact with one another first-hand.
// Aviamasters Game Features
Aviamasters is essentially defined by the random flight path, counterbalance, six token types, four speed settings, and autoplay, complete with various conditions for stopping rounds. There are no other features beyond these.
Aviamasters token types:
Additive: +$1, +$2, +$5, +$10.
Multiplier: ×2, ×3, ×4, ×5.
Rockets: divide the counter by 2. All these different types are dropped randomly throughout a flight path.
Aviamasters speed settings:
1 (Tortoise) is the slowest setting. This makes the tokens readable one-by-one as they fall off the flight path.
2 (Walking Man) is the default setting.
3 (Rabbit) is faster and the most appropriate for speed to watch while using the autoplay features.
4 (Lightning) makes a round very quickly and is only suitable to use in combination with stop conditions on the autoplay.
Autoplay automatically plays rounds. This continues indefinitely until a condition is met or the autoplay is paused mid-session. Available conditions are win on any spin, win over X, balance increase by X, balance decrease by X, and loss limit (balance decrease). Setting the loss limit is the most critical condition to define before starting a session.
The spin button can be dragged to any position on the screen. It is worth moving to where your thumb naturally falls as you prepare to start a session, if you are using the game on a mobile device.
The game has two levels of audio: music and sound effects. Sound effects are very useful, as the tone of the sound lets you know what the counter has changed to. Sound effects are not required, but music loops very often, so most people disable music.
The game history button is situated at the right edge of the screen. This will display the previous 10 or so results. This is useful, as reviewing your history after a set of rounds can give you insights that are hard to see while you're in the middle of a session.
Aviamasters includes in-game game rules. This is a detailed document of the mechanics of Aviamasters, the edge cases, and what happens to a round that is cut short. You should read this at some point before playing for real.
Any incomplete round is resolved in the 24 hours following a cancellation. If a collect was in progress when the round was cut short, the win from that collect will be paid out to you. This doesn't really matter in practice, but it's good to know.
Aviamasters contains no jackpots. There are no pooled prizes, accumulated wins, or any form of progressive jackpot system. The round is its own world, with no external mechanics or features that may affect its outcomes other than the counter. The only payout you will get from a round is the value the counter had landed on when the plane safely landed in the terminal.
In any standard crash game, the multiplier value begins at 1x, as your balance value, and rises continuously until you cash out. The counter value in Aviamasters starts off at your bet (the dollar value of a bet), and varies according to how the counter value was modified by the tokens it collected. This is a key distinction between the two types of math used in these games; in Aviamasters, bet size is the actual starting point for all math in the round.
// How to Play Aviamasters
Place your wager in the input box at the bottom of the interface, then hit the Spin button. The aircraft will ascend and proceed along a randomly determined trajectory. As tokens pass one another, the multiplier counter will update continuously.
It indicates your gross return, not your net earnings. If you wager $1 and the multiplier reaches 6.50x, a successful flight yields $6.50. Your net profit is actually $5.50, because the $6.50 bet already includes your initial $1 bet.
Absolutely. Should the plane crash when the multiplier is low, the value may drop beneath your starting bet. If the plane then manages to land safely at that reduced level, you are paid out at that figure. While you have technically won that round, the result is a net financial loss. This mechanic is intentional, not a glitch.
Select the Auto (A) option located beneath the Spin button. You will then specify the number of automatic spins and define when the sequence should stop. It is crucial to establish the 'balance decrease by X' setting beforehand, as this sets your loss cap and serves as a more effective stop-loss than trying to halt manually.
Speed 2 (marked by the Walking Man icon) is the factory default and works well for the majority of players. Speed 1 can be helpful when you are initially familiarizing yourself with the token types. Speed 4 should really only be used when Autoplay is active; at that velocity, the multiplier moves so quickly that no meaningful observation is possible.
Rounds complete automatically without any player intervention – there is no Cash Out button to interact with. While a round is active, you may alter the speed setting, but the only outcome is for the plane to either land or crash.
Yes. The input field remains editable before every round. Feel free to modify the wager whenever the plane is stationary on the ground, though adjustments cannot be made while the round is active.
This menu allows independent control of the Music and Sound Effect volumes, along with the position, dimensions, and opacity of the Spin button. Before launching a session, it is advisable to check your Sound preferences, and especially your Spin button placement, as this adjustment becomes important on mobile devices.
Recent outcomes are logged in the History button located on the right side of the screen. After a session involving 20 to 30 spins, it is worth scanning your results to determine how the payouts actually aligned, as this is often difficult to assess purely through memory.
The game requires a minimum bet of $0.10. The upper limit depends on the specific casino; the provider does not enforce a maximum bet. Please verify your platform's betting limits before playing.
Indeed. Speed settings can be modified at any time, even within an ongoing round. Some users slow down the action to analyze complex token patterns or increase the pace during passive Autoplay sessions.
No data is lost. Disconnected rounds are queued and completed within 24 hours. If you had a potential win on the line, it would be added to your account automatically. When you rejoin the game, verify your current balance and the History tab to ensure all transactions were completed correctly.
// How to Win in Aviamasters
There are certainly moments during gameplay where the plane reaches the destination successfully, and a counter appears on the screen that's higher than the value of your wager. Whether or not you can win consistently, however, depends on many other factors. In the end, every Aviamasters game is rigged with a house edge. There is simply no way to get rid of it.
Not at all. Each round has an independent and random set of outcomes. Neither looking at previous results nor trying any sort of strategy can impact the probability of the plane landing safely on the runway or, conversely, the round ending when the plane disappears from view.
Strategies like Martingale can increase your wager after losses, but they do not in any way impact the probability of winning. If you experience a long series of losses (and you definitely will at some point), you would end up losing more than if you had bet the same amount each round. It is simply not a viable strategy.
Betting more or less money doesn't have any effect on the probability of any outcome. However, it determines how much cash will come into your account. For example, $5 wagered on a round with a counter reading 5x will result in a net payout of $20, whereas $0.50 will yield $2.50. Both bets, however, had the same percentage chance of being a successful wager.
Not really. While cashing out earlier reduces the potential volatility (and your risk) during each round, it doesn't actually increase the chances of a round being won. Your profit potential will be lower, but so is the amount of money at risk during each round.
No. While it is true that there's always a player winning money at Aviamasters (there has to be), this is just the result of variance, the mathematical term for random results. When you play a game, and you win five times out of 50 rounds, it's very easy to believe that you have a winning streak going on that is sustainable long term. That's simply not the case.
There is no winning strategy because the outcomes of each round in Aviamasters are entirely unpredictable and completely out of your control. Auto cashout doesn't change anything with the game mechanics, but it does mean that you are less likely to let emotions interfere with your decision-making and more likely to stick to a consistent betting structure.
Aviamasters is a great game to play, but only if you are betting with money that you can afford to lose. There should always be a limit that determines how much you are willing to bet per round, and a predetermined budget that you are willing to risk for your gaming session.
A positive mindset doesn't help you beat Aviamasters in terms of results because the probability of any given round is always the same, regardless of how you feel. However, if you enter a session with the mindset of playing for entertainment and not for income, you are far more likely to stick to a budget and bet size that keeps you in control of the game.
When you lose, the next round does not care. There is no law of averages in Aviamasters that determines that if the plane has crashed ten times, it is more likely to land safely the next time it takes off. This is the gambler's fallacy, which has no basis in reality. The only way to recover is to not chase losses and to stop playing if you can no longer afford to do so.
Playing Aviamasters with the understanding that the amount you win is purely a result of random variance, and playing within a predetermined budget. If you are betting responsibly, then you should walk away satisfied regardless of your bottom line.
// Game Modes & Multipliers
Aviamasters operates within a singular game mode. There are no other formats, difficulty variations, or modes available to the player. The game mechanics remain the same, but the specific flight path outcomes will differ each round.
The counter begins as your bet value. As the plane flies, its value may change due to specific tokens that appear on screen. Unlike a multiplier token that climbs at a steady rate beginning from 1X, the counter value can rise from additive tokens, multiply from a multiplier token, or diminish from a rocket. Thus, its trajectory is less uniform.
Multiplier tokens (×2, ×3, ×4, ×5) multiply the current counter value when the plane hits it. For example, a ×4 token on a counter value of $3 is multiplied by a $12 counter. A ×4 token at a counter value of $0.80 results in a $3.20 counter. The key factor in this calculation is what the counter value is when it’s struck by the multiplier token.
Additive tokens (+$1, +$2, +$5, +$10) simply add that dollar amount to the current counter value, irrespective of the value on screen. Additive tokens represent a more significant proportion of your bet at smaller bet values. However, they add the same dollar amount regardless of your bet value.
Rockets divide the current counter value in half. They randomly appear on the flight path and may occur more than once in one round. One rocket on a $10 counter results in a $5 counter. Two rockets in one round on a $10 counter results in a $2.50 counter. While this may feel like a glitch, it’s a feature.
It’s beneficial for you to have additive tokens before a multiplier is struck at. For example, if the counter value at the beginning of the round is $1, adding $10 and then multiplying ×5 results in a $55 counter. If only the ×5 multiplier is present on screen, the counter is multiplied by ×5 from $1 and ends in a $5 counter.
There is a maximum value for the counter, which is well above any reasonable amount in play. It is not realistic in normal play for the counter to reach any cap.
Yes, the demo Aviamaster mode produces the same distribution of tokens, counter results, and flight paths as real-money Aviamaster mode. It doesn’t artificially inflate the multiplier token count to entice you to fund your deposit.
Each round is independently generated by the game logic. This means it doesn’t rely on the current round’s placement in your play session, or even the results of previous rounds. It generates the flight path for that round independently without knowledge of your game session.
Technically, yes; however, with Aviamaster, the probability of two rounds having the same flight path is practically 0.
It's just variance, nothing more. A streak of low numbers doesn't exert pressure to "even out" on the next spin. Thinking that a streak is telling a story is one of the biggest pitfalls of crash gambling.
// Aviamasters Bonus Features
No. Aviamasters has been designed around simplicity. There are no bonus rounds, mini-games, or special triggers. Everything that can happen in a session is part of the core round: the plane's flight, the counter, and the player's token moves.
Aviamasters has been designed for a tight, streamlined loop. Introducing bonus rounds would add unnecessary pauses and disrupt the session flow. Bonus mechanisms are also inherently distracting from the action of the core game. That was the design decision.
No. Game mechanics are controlled by BGaming and cannot be altered by casinos. Casinos may choose to offer deposit bonuses and other promotions on the game, but the game itself is unaffected.
No. Casino bonuses do not impact Aviamasters mechanics, the behavior of the counter, or the tokens themselves. Aviamasters mechanics are the same regardless of what promotions are live at any given casino.
No. Aviamasters will do everything it can in its first round of play. Nothing is unlockable, no secret layer can be uncovered, and no mechanic activates at specific times.
No. While getting a very large number on the counter requires getting very few "1s" in a row (which is rare), it is still just a single round. The game has no special states or bonus conditions.
The game, as found in casinos, will never receive any seasonal mechanics. There have been seasonal variations released under the Aviamasters banner (including Aviamasters X-mas), but those are separate games with their own game pages, not features or updates to the main game.
In my opinion, having no bonus features keeps Aviamasters cleaner for most players. However, some players really enjoy a game that expects a bonus round at some point. This is simply not a game for them.
Aviamasters features a mechanic where every round has an element of surprise. The tokens are always different, the rockets/multipliers are not always the same, but the result will always be very clear. That's a great loop and doesn't require a bonus round to work.
There are no enhanced or otherwise improved versions of the game available through the network of licensed platforms. You should be very cautious of platforms offering an "enhanced" version of the game.
// Aviamasters Free Spins
No. Since free spins require spinning reels to determine their outcome, they aren't possible in Aviamasters, which has neither reels nor spins. Every game round needs an active stake – real or demo.
This comes from how online casinos display games – crash games like Aviamasters often appear in the same lobbies as slot machines, so gamers expect the same gameplay. And since free spins are the best-known casino bonus, it's only logical that someone might search for them in any casino game.
Closest is demo mode. It allows users to play with fake money on a virtual balance, meaning free rounds are not subtracted from your balance. Demo mode is infinite; refresh the page, and it's back to the initial balance. It's not quite the same as free spins, which are included as part of the actual game in slot machines.
Some casinos allow players to wager their credit-based bonuses on Aviamasters. This doesn't mean that they're offering free rounds – bonuses have a wagering condition all to themselves, and Aviamasters mechanics remain unaffected.
Not at all. Aviamasters is completely devoid of anything that can be described as 'spins.' Any time you see that word, it refers to beginning a round – never as a spin mechanic, as it's done in the rest of the casino.
B gaming have yet to say anything in this regard. The minimal design that makes up Aviamasters isn't there by accident, and incorporating a spin mechanic would fundamentally change the game.
Not specifically, though some other titles in the BGaming catalogue are traditional slots and include free spin features, as they don't share the same categorization as Aviamasters. Free spins won't be available in crash games.
Free rounds aren't part of Aviamasters, but you might be able to find demo access and other features to improve sessions, such as bonus credits with a realistic wagering condition and the ability to set stop conditions in autoplay.
Most likely is the inclusion of free credits that can be played through on Aviamasters, not any real spin mechanics. Be sure to read the fine print and understand whether it's a bonus amount with a wagering requirement or something else. The game remains the same regardless of promotion.
In most cases, demo mode provides a better way to get to grips with any online game. It's unlimited and free of wagering and time limitations that would otherwise be present in free spins – particularly in slots. Demo is, therefore, better for Aviamasters specifically.
// Aviamasters Demo
Demo mode is nothing more than playing Aviamasters with virtual money, but all features remain the same – the counter, different token types, speed, settings, and so on. What is different is that your virtual balance does not decrease when a round finishes.
In a way, yes. The mechanics of the game itself are identical: tokens are distributed, a path is generated, and counters are calculated in the same way in the demo. Don't think that the demo generates better luck or any other special outcome – it is merely the same game running on a virtual bank.
Not here on this site. You simply click "Demo," and the game instantly loads. No registration or deposit needed. However, in some cases, the demo is hosted on the casino's own site, and there you would have to log in to play.
None. You simply refresh the page to replenish your virtual credits. You can play as many rounds in a session as you like.
No. Some people who have years of experience play only on demo and never touch real money. Others use demo when they want to take a break, or just play casually. You can even use the demo if you want to experiment with various stake amounts. The bottom line here is that the demo is meant for more than just beginners.
Yes. In fact, autoplay with specific stop conditions works exactly as it does in real play, and this is a great use case for the demo. You can actually set up an autoplay session and wait for a stop condition, then play a couple of real-money sessions with the same settings.
Use this time to get a sense of how the counter moves with a particular sequence of tokens, how often you're likely to encounter a rocket, what a normal streak of counter results looks like in a 20-30 round session, and what it feels like to play at different speeds. The demo is a tool, and these sorts of questions should help you get more out of this tool when transitioning to real play.
Yes, and it doesn't take very long. Run a good 30 to 50 rounds in the demo, and you'll get a much clearer picture of volatility than any text explanation can give you. You'll experience short runs of low-counters, runs of rockets, and even runs of positive counters. It is this sort of exposure before depositing, even if just briefly, that can make all the difference to your future success.
There is no magic number that you have to reach. Simply play on demo until you're comfortable that playing the game has become almost automatic – i.e., the counter and controls won't distract you from making your best decisions when you do switch to real play. Playing on a good 20+ rounds for 2-3 sessions will suffice for most of us to achieve this sense of familiarity.
No, and that is not the intention. The goal of the demo is simply to familiarise yourself with how the game works, not how the game will produce results for you going forward (the results are not influenced by the mode, of course).
Sure, many people choose to do this. Demo is not a trial to make a person transition to real play. The only difference between demo and real is that when you play real, you will be winning/losing your hard-earned cash.
You should do so as soon as you know exactly how the counter will move in any particular sequence and when it feels comfortable to you to press the Play button in your sleep. Then, try playing at a stake amount below what you played in the demo and stay at that stake for 2-3 sessions. Once the game feels comfortable in that real-money environment, raise your stake.
Still Have Questions?
You'll soon have the best understanding of the game of Aviamasters once you've played it. Demo is entirely free, and it does everything real-money play does.
18+ | Play responsibly | Licensed platforms only
