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Aviamasters FAQ -
Crash Game Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Aviamasters and what you can expect from the game are answered here, including how the Aviamasters game works, what the Aviamasters counter is, how to play responsibly, and Aviamasters demo play.
// Aviamasters Game Overview
Aviamasters is a crash game from BGaming where a plane follows a randomized flight path and collects a series of tokens that determine the balance of a counter. The counter starts with your bet and adjusts up or down when a plane passes by a token, so the final counter value is the win amount if the plane safely lands. Otherwise, if the plane crashes, the round ends, and you lose.
Aviamasters was created by BGaming and released on the 2nd of July 2024. You can play Aviamasters across numerous licensed casino sites worldwide. Since Aviamasters is built with HTML5 technology, you can play Aviamasters on desktop and mobile devices without installing any software.
Unlike a slot game that uses reels and paylines with the possibility of multiple wins on a spin, Aviamasters uses a randomized flight path and a counter that can increase or decrease with the tokens it encounters. The game does not use spins, and the game resolves itself without player involvement after your bet is placed. Furthermore, unlike some slot games, Aviamasters does not have hidden features that may affect results; instead, Aviamasters displays the flight path, the tokens on the plane's path, and the final result, if any.
In Aviamasters, luck rather than skill influences results. Randomness determines which tokens the plane collects on its flight path, so there is no guarantee of a particular outcome. You are able to control your betting and manage your session.
For Aviamasters, RTP is 97%. This Return to Player is a long-term average for the game, meaning that over time – say across millions of bets – a player can expect a win of roughly $97 for every $100 wagered. The RTP figure is a mathematical indicator for a particular game, and not a guarantee of any given individual session.
Aviamasters is low volatility, meaning that outcomes tend to be relatively even and consistent rather than sporadic. A low volatility game like Aviamasters does not necessarily mean you will never see a significant loss, but rather that such losses will be less common and less frequent compared to a game of high volatility.
Aviamasters is an original Aviamaster's product with a distinct gameplay style, and is not in any way related to any other crash games, such as Aviator. Aviamaster's game mechanics are very different from crash games in that, rather than having a multiplier that increases and a player cashes out, in Aviamasters the counter value can increase or decrease based on the tokens encountered, some of which will actually reduce the counter value, such as the rocket token. Additionally, Aviamaster's gameplay does not include manual cash-out.
Yes, you can play Aviamasters in demo mode with virtual credits. You don't have to create an account, deposit any real money, or have a time limit on your play to enjoy a game of Aviamasters. The game and its gameplay mechanics will be identical to the real-money version.
The game runs on an independently-certified, random number generator, ensuring the random results in each round. Randomness is ensured in terms of the flight path and what the plane passes over, so the results in Aviamaster's games are not influenced by previous rounds or by how many people are playing or their individual sessions.
Aviamaster's counter displays your win for the round, which is not necessarily the same as your net profit, especially if you bet on high-value tokens. The counter starts as your bet, and if you play Aviamaster for $1, then see your counter rise to $8 before the plane crashes or lands, you win $8. A profit, then, is equal to the final value of the counter minus your original bet. It is important to note that Aviamaster does include tokens that decrease counter values, such as the rocket, meaning that your balance may decrease to below your original wager, which means even if you successfully land the flight, it would still represent a loss.
The answer to this question will depend on both the licenses of your gambling site and any country-specific gaming regulations that may apply to you. Aviamasters is available on numerous platforms across the world, with varying degrees of availability depending on which platform you are using.
There is no official mobile app. Aviamasters is an HTML5 game, which makes it playable directly in any modern mobile web browser. If you see an app claiming to be an Aviamasters mobile app that has not been released by a licensed casino on its own app store, be sure to avoid it.
// Aviamasters Game Features
Four additive tokens, two multiplier tokens, and three rocket tokens.
Speed 1, speed 2, speed 3, speed 4.
Autoplay with stop conditions (Win, Win over X, Balance increase by X, Balance decrease by X).
The button that initiates a spin can be moved anywhere in the play area.
Controls for the sound effects and music.
A panel to review your game history.
A page that contains the rules.
Aviamasters does not feature bonus rounds, jackpots, or any side games.
+$1, +$2, +$5, and +$10 raise the value of the counter by those amounts. ×2, ×3, ×4, and ×5 multiply the value of the counter. Rockets cut the counter in half, regardless of its value. Each token has an equally likely chance to show up at any time during the round. Their position, type, and number are all randomly assigned, which means that the sequence of tokens will be different from one game to the next.
Speed 1 is called Tortoise and is the slowest of the available speeds, giving you time to observe every token in detail. Speed 2 is called Walking Man and is the default setting of the game, with a speed that balances visibility and playability. Speed 3 is called Rabbit and is twice as fast as Walking Man, though the faster speed requires more focus to be able to see which token has come into view. Speed 4 is called Lightning, and the fastest speed will finish in mere seconds, making it appropriate only when configured for autoplay.
The following stop conditions can be configured in Autoplay:
Win: The Autoplay will stop the first time a round finishes and the value on the counter is greater than the bet.
Win over X: A Win over 0 is functionally identical to Win. A Win over 2.1 will only stop autoplay if a single round ends with a counter value greater than 2.1.
Balance increase by X: The average amount won during a single session. If X is set to 3, then each time a session results in a total balance change of 3 or greater, the Autoplay will stop.
Balance decrease by X: The average amount lost during a single session. While there is no guarantee you can't lose a single round more than your bet if you don't hit a token, an average loss of over X per game can result from a string of consecutive losses. If X is set to 10, then every time a session loses 10 or more in a single session, Autoplay will stop.
The fourth stop condition listed is by far the most important and should almost always be set before playing autoplay.
Yes, and I recommend you do this. You can click and drag the Spin button to just about any position you see fit on your screen. On mobile devices in particular, this is particularly useful to avoid the annoyance of having to move the button halfway through a session.
They are functional. When a token is landed on, a sound is played in addition to the counter updating to the new value. The sound lets you know you just won without looking at the display, and can also alert you if the game was interrupted before you collected the counter. Background music is also present, and is completely optional. It loops, so I recommend you turn it off.
The results of the most recent games you have played. It is common to play several rounds of the game, and then find yourself wondering how things went over that round, and looking at the history makes it easier to assess the overall outcome of the session. In the moment, the results can seem clear enough, but looking at a series of results together makes it easier to spot patterns.
The Rules page contains a document that describes in detail exactly how the game works. This can be helpful to learn about the behavior of the counter, the properties of the tokens, special cases like interrupted rounds, and the formal terminology of the game. It can be helpful to review the Rules before using the game with real money for the first time.
No. The value of the multiplier is the amount of money awarded when the round ends, and no other prizes are possible. No jackpot exists, nor does any form of pooled prize system. The amount of money you win will not increase based on how long you have played, as there is no form of accumulation built into the game.
When Aviamasters detects an interrupted round, the round will be automatically resolved within 24 hours. If a round was interrupted while the player had an available win, that prize will be credited to the player's account. The rules of Aviamasters have been set so that a lost connection will never result in an unsolved state.
The interface is very Spartan, with a minimalist design. The counter sits just above the airplane at the top of the screen, while the controls for the bet speed and button placement are located at the bottom of the screen. There are rules, history, and settings to be found on the right side, as well as a counter that becomes the singular focus during a round.
// How to Play Aviamasters
Open up the bet field, located at the bottom of the screen, and input your bet. Hit Spin, and the plane takes off. Watch as the counter increases with each token as it is collected in real-time. The round ends when the plane lands or crashes.
The value of your counter when the round begins is equal to your bet. If you bet $2, the counter starts at $2, and all tokens – flat increments, multipliers, and rockets alike in a round – work off of that base amount. When the round ends, you have the value of the counter as your payout, not your profit.
Unless you want to change speed, there is nothing to do. The round completes itself. You can watch the counter go and observe what token type comes next. There is nothing to do in a round other than change the speed via the speed buttons.
Open the Autoplay window on the (A) and set the number of rounds you want to run. Set limits; at a minimum, you should set the loss to prevent the loss of all funds from happening. Hit Start. When it has ended, take that as your cue that this was enough for now – not necessarily an indicator that another round is needed to start.
Manual play, Speed 2. Speed 1 is best for learning what tokens look like. Speed 3 is great if you use autoplay to be able to observe the game. Speed 4 should only be used if autoplay is set up, as at that speed, you do not really need to observe each round.
On the right side of the screen is a history button that shows you past rounds. You can refer to this when you have had more than 20 spins and don't need to rely on memory to keep track of your results.
You can bet $0.10 a round. You cannot control what the maximum is in the game; it is the casino that has it.
You can set your bet at any time before a round, but you can't adjust it during a round.
Depending on whether you are on a mobile device, change the location of the Spin button. You may want to remove the background music, select the speed you are going to play at, and you should set up Autoplay stop conditions if you are going to use Autoplay.
Reload the page to see your balance and history. The round is saved if it is not completed within a 24-hour period of time. Do not spin more rounds until you know for sure that your round ended properly.
A round normally takes a few seconds to complete at the normal speed. At Speed 4, they can often be less than two seconds, and at Speed 1, there is enough time to clearly understand every single token before you. Speed does not impact the outcome, just how you experience the round.
Generally, shorter sessions with defined limits work better. Since Aviamaster goes so quickly, it is easy to go long without breaks and have bad decision-making creep in because of fatigue. Set yourself a round limit, a loss limit, and a time limit so that you don't play beyond the limits you set for yourself.
// How to Win in Aviamasters
You win whenever your plane touches down, and your counter number is higher than what you placed your wager on. Your profit is calculated as the final counter value less your stake. A crash that happens with your counter sitting lower than your stake still counts as a "win" since your plane landed, even though that round was actually a financial loss for you.
None exists. Since each round result is purely random, the odds of safely landing can never be modified by your betting order, timing, or study of previous game outcomes.
No. Progressive bet patterns cannot alter the probability of any particular round. They do increase your risk, often dramatically so in the case of extended losing sequences – which in a perfectly random game is completely normal. They do nothing to positively affect outcomes.
No. Bet size only changes the monetary amounts involved in a given game result. It does not affect the likelihood of a successful landing or crash landing. A $5 bet and a $0.20 bet in any given round have the same probability of success.
Cashing out early lowers the risk on any single round. It doesn't change whether or not that round lands safely; it just means you cash out the plane earlier, which results in a lower counter value when successful. A lower-risk approach with a lower reward for any given round. The win/loss ratio remains identical, regardless.
It comes down to a matter of short-term variance. In small sample sets, results can look lopsided. If a player has a 7/10 hit rate, they might seem to be a "good player," but 10 rounds are simply not a big enough sample size. Over thousands of rounds, results tend to average out towards the game's 97% theoretical RTP.
No, not in terms of odds or probability. Auto cashout improves session discipline by eliminating subjective decisions from the player's mind during the game. Having a single consistent way to play is helpful for session management, but it will do nothing to change the results of a game round.
Setting a budget and loss limits. Playing with consistent bet sizing. Respecting your pre-set conditions. Recognizing and accepting each round as its own entity. All of the above will do nothing to change your win rate, but they will significantly improve your session experience.
The most harmful thing you can do is chase losses by increasing your bet. This assumes the game will correct the balance after an extended losing sequence, and that will never happen. Each round is its own entity with its own odds. Increasing stakes after losing does nothing to improve outcomes.
By remaining within my preset conditions, playing a pre-determined number of rounds, and leaving happy even if the results didn't turn out perfectly for me. As long as my decisions throughout the session were intentional, any given session can be a success regardless of my balance.
Playing steadily is preferable. Playing consistent bet sizes and adhering to clear game conditions creates a higher degree of predictability for any given session. Bet big to increase the variance and the emotional stakes, but not the chances of any one round.
// Game Modes & Multipliers
There is only 1. Aviamasters doesn't have alternate game modes, alternate difficulty levels, or different versions of the game. Only the path, and what tokens will be included in that path, change.
The counter is the value in your bankroll. A rising multiplier only goes up. The counter can go up or down, and it does, depending on what tokens appear on the flight path.
When the plane enters the zone for the multiplier, the counter is multiplied by that token. If a ×3 multiplier hits while the counter is $4, it will become $12. If it were $0.80, it would become $2.40. It is the value at that moment that matters, not the starting multiplier.
Each one hits, in the order it hits. If a +$5 token comes before a ×4 token, and the counter starts at $1, it will become $6 ($1 +$5), and then $24 ($6 ×4). If the order were reversed (×4 then +$5), the value would become $4 ($1 × 4), then $9 ($4 + $5). Order matters a lot.
They halve it immediately. Two of them will quarter it. Multiple rockets on one round are entirely possible. Rockets appear at random on any round, as do any of the other token types. This is the game, and the mechanics by which it is balanced – not a mistake or an event.
No. The multipliers are random tokens that appear at random positions on the flight path. The fact that your previous round's multipliers ended up on the lower side of the counter does not increase the probability of the next round producing a high one. Each round is independent of the last.
No. The type of token, and how many of each type, vary per round. The same round might not have any rockets, while another round has 5 of them.
It has a technical maximum, but it is high enough to never be reached in the game as written.
No. The generation of flight path and tokens in both modes is identical. Demo play will not give you better sequences of tokens than the real-money game.
There are too many combinations of type and position of tokens that could occur in the game. While it is technically possible for the same tokens in the same order, in practice, this has little chance of being seen.
It’s best to view them as outliers rather than anticipated outcomes. High payouts are what stick in your mind, which distorts the memory bank; a single $40 counter will likely overshadow the ten consecutive rounds of $1.20 you played just before or after it. Consequently, the actual average return aligns much more closely with the median result than it does with the highest peaks.
// Aviamasters Bonus Features
Not at all. The game lacks bonus rounds, mini-games, and feature triggers entirely. The entire experience is contained within the primary flight cycle—the aircraft’s route, the counter, and the coins lining the path. The architecture is purposefully stark.
It was a deliberate choice to preserve the uninterrupted cadence of the session and maintain the raw edge of the risk. Standard bonus rounds often act as an interrupt, diverting the player away from the central loop. In Aviamasters, every moment spent airborne contributes equally to the outcome. Introducing supplementary mechanisms would disrupt this singular flow.
You can leverage third-party casino rewards, such as deposit incentives or cashback, while enjoying Aviamasters on certain sites. However, these remain external to the game's code and are governed by separate terms. They influence your bankroll, not the game itself.
The mechanics of Aviamasters are hardcoded and unalterable by the operator. The casino may decorate the game with promotional material, but has absolutely no say in its inner workings, token placement, or counter calculations.
Indeed. There are no obscure unlock requirements to memorize, no alternative views to master, and no auxiliary rules to juggle. You will find the entire instruction manual within the basic gameplay itself.
No rewards are gated behind volume of play or duration. Any potential feature you discover on your very first spin will remain available for every session thereafter.
BGaming has produced seasonal iterations like Aviamasters X-mas, but these are separate game products entirely. You will not find a "seasonal update" of the Aviamasters title that temporarily activates a new mechanic.
This style is surprisingly popular. In fact, some of the highest acclaimed crash games operate with extreme simplicity. It is generally accepted that the primary drama of timing and exposure need not be artificially propped up by additional bonus features. Aviamasters operates strictly in this space.
The variable token layout. Every single session features a unique flight path and a distinct sequence of rewards. You might see the multiplier rocket down from 3323 to 1661 as a result of the coin halving, or you could be hit by a ×5 right when you're almost touching the safety bar. That unpredictable counter movement generates enough genuine volatility on its own.
Those players who enjoy non-stop rounds, a transparent risk/reward framework, and no complicated new rules. Gamers who are in the habit of looking out for bonus triggers or free spin sessions will have a different perspective.
// Aviamasters Free Spins
No. Because Aviamasters doesn't have reels or a spinning mechanism, it can't offer free spins. You need to place a bet on every game round, whether that's for real money or demo credits.
Casual casino players are used to free spins as a bonus on slots. Because they find Aviamasters alongside slot games in casino lobbies, players expect a free spins feature. Since that feature doesn't exist, search engines get a lot of queries about it from casino players.
Yes. Demo mode functions as a substitute for the "free spins" bonus on slots. You can play an unlimited number of game rounds in demo credits (the only "cost" is time). You won't trigger a bonus or spend any money to unlock demo mode.
Yes, some casinos offer credit bonuses that work with Aviamasters. The "free" money you receive from these bonuses functions like the free spins bonus of a slot game. These bonuses still have terms and conditions and are distinct from the game itself.
No. In slots, "free spins" simply unlock a game round. But slots still require you to play them within the same reel and win-line structure that they operate under. Because Aviamasters lacks this mechanical structure, it wouldn't make sense to add the same bonus feature. To do so, the developers would have to re-engineer Aviamasters from scratch to function like a slot.
Demo mode is the closest Aviamasters can come to "free spins," but you should also consider the terms and conditions of a casino bonus offer. Another bonus feature is the "autoplay stop condition" feature. It's worth learning this one if you use Aviamasters often.
It's most likely that the "free spins" language on a casino page is a marketing term for a free credit bonus. Check the terms and conditions before you click "claim" on any bonus. It may be that the money has to be wagered, or it may be "demo mode." It's still free money, but there will always be conditions.
Yes. Each game round you play with Aviamasters will have a different sequence of tokens to play with, a counter with three possible directions, and an immediate win or loss. This is enough to keep you coming back for another round of play. Aviamasters doesn't require "free spins" or other bonuses to make it more exciting.
No. Crash games typically don't use reel-based spin mechanics. The multiplier/counter systems that are the primary focus of crash games work on very different tension-generating logic than slots do. Because free spins don't fit the crash genre, they won't be featured in games like Aviamasters.
Demo mode. No deposit, no wagering requirements, unlimited play. This isn't "free credit," which comes with terms. It is the game you would play with real money for absolutely free.
// Aviamasters Demo
The complete game on virtual credits. The mechanics, tokens, speed, and autoplay settings are all identical to real-money play. Results in the demo aren't reflected in any actual balance, and the virtual credits reset every time you refresh the page.
In terms of gameplay, absolutely. The way the flight path is generated, how tokens are allocated, and the underlying algorithm for the counter are identical in both versions. It's crucial to know that the demo does not yield easier wins or higher payouts; it's the same game, relying on the same randomizer, so every round carries equal risk.
No account is needed to play on our platform. You can launch the demo straight from your browser. However, if you're accessing it through a specific casino or site, they might require a user profile. Check the login rules of your chosen platform before assuming it's open access.
No limitations exist here. Your demo credits will simply replenish when you reload. You can play as many rounds as you like, and there's no timer.
Play at the level you plan to risk when you're spending your own cash, rather than playing at the lowest possible value. Pay attention to how the game counter fluctuates over 20 to 30 consecutive rounds instead of just one or two. Toggle between different speed settings consecutively. Set up the autoplay feature and observe how the "auto-stop" functions trigger. Think of this as the best way to familiarize yourself with the game's interface and mechanics before making your first deposit.
Definitely. Every setting related to autoplay, including the conditions for it to stop, is identical in the demo as it is when betting real money. It is highly advisable to use the demo to test out auto-stop conditions, so you know exactly how they work before activating them with your real money.
Yes. After around 30 to 50 rounds, you'll start seeing the volatility patterns: how often a rocket flies, the range of the multiplier highs and lows, and the typical duration of flights. This isn't as clear when playing just 10 or 20 rounds. If you want the most accurate understanding of volatility, the demo is your best tool.
No, anyone who's played Aviamasters can benefit from using the demo, regardless of experience level. Seasoned players often return to the demo to test new betting levels after a break, or simply for the pure enjoyment of playing for free.
It won't change the outcome of any round; luck is still the deciding factor. But using the demo allows you to familiarize yourself with the interface and controls. This means you spend less mental energy trying to figure out how the game works, enabling you to make more informed betting decisions once you're on real money.
Yes. All mobile browsers, from iOS to Android, can run the demo. There are no apps to install.
The right time is when the game's mechanics feel automatic. This is when you've moved past asking what the rocket is doing or wondering if you should stop the auto-bet at a specific multiplier. By then, your mind is free to focus entirely on how much to bet and managing your session. A good rule of thumb is to start with a lower bet than the amount you were accustomed to using in the demo for your initial real-money sessions.
Yes, you can play the demo exclusively if you prefer. There is no deadline or pressure to ever play for real money, and many enjoy it just this way. The gameplay is the same.
Still Have Questions?
You'll learn the most about Aviamasters by seeing how it functions firsthand. Using demo mode is free of charge and teaches you everything you need to know.
18+ | Play responsibly | Licensed platforms only
