Aviator by Spribe - The Crash Game Taking Off in Malaysia

Watch the multiplier climb and cash out before the plane flies away.

Aviator turned a single rising number into one of the most-played real-money games in online casinos. There are no reels, no cards, no paylines - just a plane, a multiplier, and one button. This guide covers how the round actually works, what the RTP figure means in practice, how the bonus terms are usually structured, and what to check before you sign up anywhere.

18+ onlyProvably fair~97% RTPNo download
Aviator - Game Overview
ProviderSpribe
Game typeCrash / multiplier game
Release year2019
RTP~97% (theoretical, operator-dependent)
VolatilityHigh
Max multiplierUncapped in practice, historical rounds above 1,000x recorded
Min / max betSet by each operator (commonly from around RM 0.47)
Bet panelsTwo simultaneous bets per round
PlatformsDesktop and mobile browser (HTML5, no download)
FairnessProvably fair, independently verifiable per round

What Is Aviator by Spribe?

Aviator was released by Spribe in 2019 and is usually filed under "crash games" rather than slots or live dealer titles, since it runs on its own simple mechanic instead of reels or cards. Every round starts the same way: a plane sits on the runway, players place their stake, and once betting closes the plane takes off while a multiplier counts up from 1.00x. You can cash out at any point while the plane is still in the air - doing so locks in your stake multiplied by whatever number is showing at that instant. If you wait past the moment the plane flies off screen, the round has crashed and any bet still in play is lost.

What made the format spread so quickly across live-casino lobbies is the pace. A round can be over in a few seconds or run close to a minute, there's no waiting for a dealer or a spinning reel to settle, and the decision to cash out is entirely the player's to make in real time. Spribe licenses Aviator to operators rather than running its own casino, so you'll find the same game, with the same math behind it, sitting inside dozens of different casino sites and live-game lobbies worldwide.

Where Aviator Fits Among Spribe's Games

Spribe has since released other crash-style titles - Mines, Goal, Plinko - built on a similar engine, but Aviator remains the flagship. It was the first to pair a live multiplayer bet panel, showing other players' stakes and cash-outs in real time, with the simplicity of a single rising number.

How the Multiplier Works

Aviator multiplier curve example

The multiplier begins at 1.00x and climbs for as long as the round lasts. There's no fixed ceiling and no repeating cycle - the crash point is drawn fresh each round, so a 1.10x crash and a 40x crash are both live possibilities back to back. As a rule, small multipliers turn up far more often than large ones, which is what gives the game its shape: frequent modest wins for players who cash out early, and rare large wins for those willing to hold on.

Multiplier rangeHow often it appearsTypical player approach
1.00x - 2.00xMost common outcomeSmall, frequent cash-outs
2.00x - 5.00xRegular but less frequentBalanced risk and reward
5.00x - 20.00xUncommonHigher-risk cash-out target
20.00x and aboveRareLong-shot, high-variance play

Two features shape how people actually play this curve: an auto cash-out setting, which locks in your multiplier target automatically instead of relying on a manual click, and a dual-bet panel that lets you run two stakes in the same round, each with its own cash-out point. Neither feature changes the odds - they just remove the need to react within a split second.

RTP, Volatility & Fairness

Spribe publishes a theoretical RTP of roughly 97% for Aviator - a long-run average across an enormous number of rounds, not a promise for any single session, where results can swing well above or below it. Volatility is high: most rounds resolve at low multipliers, and the occasional big one is what keeps the long-run average where it is.

  • Provably fair system: each round's outcome is generated with a hash players can verify after the round ends.
  • Independent rounds: no round is influenced by the one before it, so patterns and "hot streaks" are not real signals.
  • Dual bet panel: place two separate stakes per round, each with its own cash-out target.
  • Auto cash-out: pre-set a target multiplier so the game cashes out for you automatically.
  • Live bet feed: see other players' stakes and cash-outs update in real time during the round.

Welcome Bonus

Welcome bonus

Operators that carry Aviator typically run a first-deposit match for new players, and some add ongoing free-bet or cashback promotions aimed specifically at crash-game players. Before claiming any offer, it's worth checking the fine print rather than just the headline number:

  • The wagering requirement - how many times the bonus amount must be played through before you can withdraw.
  • Whether Aviator and other crash games count at 100% toward that requirement, or at a reduced rate.
  • Any maximum bet size allowed while a bonus is active.
  • The expiry window on the bonus and any winnings from it.

Aviator vs. Traditional Pokies

Aviator gets compared to pokies often, but the mechanics differ. Here's how the two formats compare on what usually matters to players:

FeatureAviatorTypical video pokie
Round lengthSeconds to about a minuteA few seconds per spin
Player controlCash-out timing is entirely up to the playerNo control once the spin starts
Bonus featuresAuto cash-out, dual bet panelFree spins, wilds, multipliers built into the reels
Visible other playersYes, live bet feedNo, single-player by design

Cash-Out Approaches Players Commonly Use

  • Fixed target: set an auto cash-out at a chosen multiplier, such as 1.5x or 2x, every round.
  • Split betting: cash out one stake early for a small guaranteed return, and let the second stake run higher.
  • Session limits: decide a loss limit and a win target before you start, and stop the session at whichever comes first.

None of these change the odds behind the game - Aviator doesn't track past rounds or build toward anything. They're simply ways to keep a session predictable and to avoid the kind of on-the-spot decisions that lead to chasing losses.

Mobile Play

Aviator runs entirely in HTML5, so it opens directly in a mobile browser on Android or iOS without any separate app. The layout adjusts to a smaller screen but keeps the same bet panel, multiplier display, and cash-out button as the desktop version.

Getting Started

Registration steps
  • Choose a licensed operator that lists Aviator by Spribe in its live or crash-game section.
  • Register an account, verify your details, and make a deposit using a supported payment method.
  • Open Aviator, set your stake and, if you want, an auto cash-out target, then place your bet before the round closes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Aviator?

Aviator is a crash game built by Spribe, first released in 2019. A plane climbs across the screen while a multiplier rises from 1.00x. Players bet before the round starts and cash out whenever they choose - wait too long and the plane flies off, ending the round.

What is the RTP of Aviator?

Spribe states a theoretical RTP of about 97%, calculated over millions of rounds rather than a single session, so short-term results can land well above or below it.

Is Aviator provably fair?

Yes. Each round uses a published hash players can check afterwards to confirm the crash point wasn't altered after bets were placed.

Can I play Aviator on a phone?

Yes. Aviator is built in HTML5 and opens directly in a mobile browser on Android or iOS, with the same controls as desktop.

Does a betting strategy improve my odds?

No. Each round is generated independently, so fixed cash-out targets, split bets, and session limits are risk-management habits rather than ways to beat the house edge.

What's the minimum bet on Aviator?

Minimum and maximum stakes are set by the operator hosting the game, not by Spribe, so they vary from one site to another. Many licensed operators allow stakes under RM 0.47, which makes the game accessible for casual play.

Where can I legally play Aviator?

Availability depends on the online gambling rules in your country and on which operators hold a valid licence there. In Malaysia, always confirm an operator is licensed and complies with KKMM regulations for your region before depositing.

Play within your limits. Aviator is a real-money game of chance, and the plane can crash at any multiplier, including 1.00x. Only use licensed operators, set a deposit and time limit before you start, and treat losses as final rather than something to chase. Free, confidential support is available 24/7 in Malaysia from relevant support services or through KKMM-approved responsible gambling resources.