Aviator by Spribe is a crash game where a plane takes off and the multiplier increases from 1.00x until it flies away randomly. You bet before takeoff, watch the multiplier climb (1.5x, 2x, 5x, sometimes 100x or higher), and cash out before the plane disappears. If you cash out at 2.5x on a 100 KES bet, you win 250 KES. Wait too long and the plane crashes, you lose the bet. RTP sits at 97%, rounds last 5-30 seconds, and you can place two simultaneous bets with different cashout strategies.
Each round starts with a countdown (5 seconds to place bets). The plane takes off and the multiplier begins at 1.00x, increasing exponentially—slowly at first (1.00x to 2.00x), then faster as it climbs. The game uses provably fair technology; you can verify each round's fairness through the hash system before the plane takes off. Crash point is predetermined but encrypted, so neither you nor the operator can manipulate when it flies away.
You place your bet (minimum 10 KES, maximum 10,000 KES per bet) and choose when to cash out manually by clicking the button, or set an auto-cashout target like 2x or 3x. If the plane crashes at 1.83x and you cashed out at 1.50x, you win; if you're waiting for 2x, you lose everything. The game shows other players' bets and cashouts in real-time—you'll see someone cash out at 1.2x for a safe 20% profit while another player waits for 10x and either wins big or loses it all.
The game uses minimal data compared to slots or live casino—roughly 3-5 MB per hour on Safaricom or Airtel 4G. Rounds finish in seconds rather than minutes, perfect if you're playing during lunch break or commute. You control when to cash out instead of waiting for random slot symbols to align, which gives an illusion of skill even though the crash point is predetermined. Social aspect matters too; seeing other Kenyan players cash out at 50x or lose at 1.01x creates excitement.
5-30 seconds per round, play dozens of games in 10 minutes unlike slots that need longer sessions
3-5 MB per hour, works smoothly on 3G connections without buffering or loading delays
Place two bets simultaneously with different strategies—cash one early, let the other ride for bigger multipliers
Verify round outcomes through cryptographic hash before plane takes off, ensures fairness and transparency
No strategy guarantees wins since crash points are random, but certain approaches manage risk better. Conservative players cash out at 1.5x-2x every round; this hits roughly 50-60% of the time based on probability distribution. You won't get huge wins but bankroll lasts longer. Aggressive players wait for 5x-10x multipliers which hit maybe 5-10% of rounds—when they connect the payout is massive, but expect long losing streaks.
The dual bet approach splits risk: bet 50 KES with auto-cashout at 1.5x (safe), and another 50 KES waiting for 5x+ (risky). The 1.5x bet recovers losses when the 5x bet fails, and occasionally both hit when the plane flies past 5x. Some players use Martingale (doubling bet after losses), but this drains bankrolls fast—losing 5 rounds in a row turns a 100 KES bet into 3,200 KES on the sixth round.
| Strategy | Target cashout | Win rate | Risk level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 1.3x - 1.5x | 60-70% | Low |
| Moderate | 2x - 3x | 35-45% | Medium |
| Aggressive | 5x - 10x | 8-15% | High |
| Extreme | 20x+ | 2-5% | Very high |
Start with minimum bets (10-20 KES) while you learn the rhythm and payout patterns. The game shows recent multipliers on the left side—if you see several low crashes (1.1x, 1.3x, 1.2x), some players believe a higher multiplier is "due," but this is gambler's fallacy. Each round is independent; past results don't influence future crashes.
Set a session bankroll before playing; if you bring 1,000 KES decide in advance that you'll stop at 1,500 KES profit or 1,000 KES loss. Auto-cashout helps avoid emotional decisions—watching the multiplier climb to 8x then crash at 8.1x right before you click is frustrating. Setting auto-cashout at your target (say 3x) removes the temptation to wait "just a bit longer" and lose everything.
Set automatic cashout at your target multiplier to avoid emotional decisions and guarantee profits when hit
Other players claiming they "know" the next crash point are guessing; no pattern or system predicts outcomes
Learn game mechanics with 10-20 KES bets before risking larger amounts on strategies
When you double your starting bankroll, withdraw half and continue playing with winnings only
Besides Aviator, the platform offers similar crash mechanics with different themes. JetX by SmartSoft Gaming works identically but with a jet instead of a plane and slightly different graphics. Lucky Jet adds bonus rounds where random multipliers can boost your cashout. Spaceman by Pragmatic Play includes an astronaut climbing multipliers with a chat feature where you can interact with other players during rounds.
SmartSoft Gaming
RTP: 97.5%
Jet-themed crash game with triple bet option and max multiplier reaching 50,000x
1Win
RTP: 97%
Bonus features with random multiplier boosts appearing during rounds for extra wins
Pragmatic Play
RTP: 96.5%
Astronaut climbing multipliers with 50% cashout option to secure half your bet early
Turbo Games
RTP: 97%
Minimalist crash game with ultra-fast rounds finishing in 3-10 seconds per game
97% RTP means the game returns 97 KES for every 100 KES wagered long-term across thousands of rounds. In any single session you might win 200% or lose 100%; RTP is a statistical average, not a session guarantee. The multiplier distribution follows exponential decay—lower multipliers (1.1x-2x) occur frequently while high multipliers (10x+) are rare. Roughly 50% of rounds crash below 2x, 25% between 2x-5x, and only 5-10% reach 10x or higher.
This distribution explains why conservative strategies (cashing at 1.5x) win more often but profit slowly; while aggressive approaches (waiting for 10x) lose frequently but occasionally hit massive wins that offset previous losses. Neither approach changes the house edge—RTP stays 97% regardless of when you cash out. Your strategy just determines volatility (how much your bankroll swings) rather than long-term expected return.