Basics

What Aviatrix is and who made it

Aviatrix is a crash game in which a plane takes off, the multiplier rises, and you have to cash out your bet before the flight breaks off. Its distinctive feature is that the planes here are NFTs you can collect and customize. Let's break it down calmly: what kind of game this is, who made it, and what's important to understand from the very start.

Play, but responsibly!

Aviatrix is easy to mistake for an ordinary 'little plane' game, but it has a face of its own. It's a new-generation crash game: the same rising multiplier and random break-off as its predecessors, but with a superstructure of NFT planes, levels, and tournaments. To avoid getting lost in the marketing and falling for myths, let's start with the basics — what kind of game this is, who's behind it, and what to understand right away.

This is the 'Basics' section: a calm explanation without casino advertising and without calls to play. We'll cover the mechanics in detail and the math in separate articles; here is the big picture.

What Aviatrix is

Aviatrix belongs to the crash-game genre. The essence is extremely simple: you place a bet before the round starts, the plane takes off, and the multiplier begins to rise from ×1.00 upward. At any moment you can 'cash out' your bet — then it's multiplied by the current coefficient. But at a random, pre-set moment the flight breaks off; if you didn't exit in time, the bet burns entirely.

A few basic properties common to the genre and characteristic of Aviatrix:

  • A random break-off moment. The crash point is determined by a random number generator and locked in before your bet. It can't be predicted.
  • Two bets and auto cash out. In one round you can run up to two bets and set the auto-cash-out multiplier in advance.
  • Provably fair. The outcome of each round can be rechecked cryptographically.
  • A return of about 97%. The specific value is configured by the operator, but it usually stays around 97%.
  • High variance. Big multipliers are rare, and instant break-offs at ×1.0x are commonplace.

Below is a brief 'card' for the game. The numbers are given as typical: they depend on the specific casino and may differ.

Key parameters of Aviatrix. The values are typical and depend on the operator and source.
Game typecrash game
Developerthe studio Aviatrix
RTP~97% (configured by the operator)
Maximum multiplierup to 10,000×
Bets per roundup to 2, with auto cash out
Fairnessprovably fair (server seed + client seed + nonce)
Distinctive featureNFT planes, customization, metagame
Special modeSecond Chance (a second flight, ~97.5% RTP, higher variance)

Key point

A fair game ≠ a profitable game

Provably fair guarantees that the casino doesn't tweak the result, and this can be verified. But 'fair' doesn't mean 'profitable': the casino's edge is built into the math itself, so over the distance the player's expectation is negative. Everything else on this site is a consequence of this simple fact.

Who developed Aviatrix

The game was created by the studio Aviatrix. It's important to distinguish the roles: the developer makes the game and supplies it to casinos through aggregators, but doesn't accept bets itself or maintain the player's balance — that's what operators do. So complaints along the lines of 'the developer tweaked it so I'd lose' are at odds with how the industry works: the round's fairness is mathematically verifiable, and RTP is certified independently.

Aviatrix stands out in the industry precisely as an innovator of the genre: it's the first crash game to build a whole system of customization and competition around NFT planes. The game has received industry awards (including best new game at SiGMA World Europe 2023) and is distributed by licensed operators in a number of jurisdictions. We deliberately don't name or recommend specific casinos — that's outside the site's purpose.

Verified

The Aviatrix random number generator is certified by independent testing laboratories, and the outcome of each round can additionally be checked by hand through provably fair. These are two different levels of trust: RNG certification and personal rechecking of a round.

What makes Aviatrix different: NFT planes

The main calling card of Aviatrix is planes in the form of NFTs. A player can collect, upgrade the appearance, and 'own' their plane, and a metagame is built around this: levels and experience, daily tournaments, leaderboards, rewards, and a loyalty program. For a genre where games are usually almost indistinguishable, this is genuinely fresh and explains Aviatrix's popularity.

But this is exactly where the most expensive misconception lives, and it's important to address it right now.

Myth

'The cooler and rarer the plane, the higher it flies and the greater the chance of a big multiplier.'

Fact

An NFT plane is cosmetics. The break-off point, RTP, and probabilities don't depend on which plane you're flying. A 'rare' plane doesn't change the math one bit.

The same applies to the metagame: levels, tournaments, and achievements are engagement and competitive excitement, not a tool that raises your chances against the casino. They make the game more interesting, but they don't cancel the negative expectation. Seeing in leveling up a 'path to a steady win' is a mistake.

How a round goes

Step by step, one round of Aviatrix looks like this:

  • Before takeoff you place one or two bets and, if you wish, set the auto-cash-out multiplier.
  • The plane takes off, and the multiplier rises from ×1.00.
  • You cash out the bet manually or by auto cash out — then it's multiplied by the current coefficient.
  • At a random moment the flight breaks off. All un-cashed-out bets in that round burn.

The Second Chance mode is worth mentioning separately: for some players a second short flight launches after the break-off. It usually has a slightly higher stated return (around 97.5%) and noticeably higher variance — the outcomes are spread more widely. This is a feature of the mechanics, not a gift: the player's expectation stays negative, the fluctuations of the result are simply larger.

Any 'special mode' changes variance and presentation, but doesn't cancel the casino's edge — that's mathematically impossible.

Its place in the genre

Aviatrix isn't the first or the only crash game. Alongside it are Aviator by Spribe, JetX by SmartSoft, Lucky Jet, Rocket X, and others. Under the hood they all have the same random process with similar math: a return of about 97%, the probability of reaching multiplier ×x is approximately 0.97/x, rounds are independent and verifiable. They differ mainly in design, brand, and 'add-ons.'

The difference of Aviatrix is not in the chances but in the superstructure: NFT planes and the metagame. So looking for a 'more profitable' one among crash games is pointless — the math is the same for all, and the choice between them is a choice of design. We've put a detailed comparison in a separate article.

Next it's logical to break down what exactly happens inside a round and where the casino's edge comes from — that's in the article on mechanics, and the strict numbers on return and variance are in the breakdown of RTP.

Frequently asked questions

Aviatrix is a crash game: a plane takes off on screen, the multiplier rises from ×1.00 upward, and your task is to cash out your bet before the flight suddenly breaks off. In time — the bet is multiplied by the current coefficient; too late — it burns. The break-off moment is set by a random number generator in advance and can't be predicted. The main feature of Aviatrix is that the planes themselves are NFTs you can collect and customize.

The game was made by the studio Aviatrix — it's a developer, not a casino: it supplies the game to licensed operators but doesn't accept bets itself. Aviatrix is known as the first crash game with NFT customization of planes and has received industry awards (including best new game at SiGMA World Europe 2023). The random number generator is certified by independent laboratories.

No. An NFT plane is cosmetics and a collecting element: it changes the appearance and may give access to tournaments or metagame rewards, but it has no effect on the game's math. The break-off point, RTP, and probabilities are the same regardless of which plane you're flying. A 'rare' plane doesn't fly higher and doesn't raise the chance of a big multiplier — that's a common misconception.

Second Chance is a mode in which, for some players, a second short flight launches after the break-off. It usually has a slightly higher stated return (around 97.5%) and higher variance — that is, the outcomes are spread more widely. It's important to understand: this is a feature of the mechanics, not 'generosity' or a way to beat the casino. The player's expectation stays negative, just as in the regular mode.

No. The break-off point is computed in advance from the server seed, client seed, and round number and locked in before your bet, while the server seed is revealed only after the round. The growth of the multiplier on screen is the playback of an already-determined result. So no 'predictors' or paid 'signals' can know the outcome — there's nowhere to get it from before the round ends.