Aviamasters — Quick Specs
Not a Crash Game: What Aviamasters Actually Is
In a standard crash game, the multiplier rises automatically, you decide when to cash out, and a single crash point ends the round for everyone. Aviamasters follows none of these conventions.
Here’s how Aviamasters actually works: you place a bet and press Spin. A red propeller plane launches from an aircraft carrier and flies a randomized path over the ocean. During the flight, the plane encounters two types of objects: multipliers (which add to your round balance) and rockets (which halve your round balance and drop your altitude). When the flight ends, one of two things happens: the plane lands on the carrier (you win your accumulated round balance) or the plane crashes into the water (you lose your bet).
The critical difference: you don’t control when to cash out. The flight resolves on its own. Your only pre-round decisions are bet size and speed setting. Once you press Spin, the outcome is entirely determined by the game’s RNG path — including which multipliers and rockets appear, and whether the landing succeeds.
The Rocket Mechanic: Mid-Flight Punishment
Rockets are what make Aviamasters genuinely different from both crash games and standard slots. When the plane hits a rocket during its flight, your current round balance is halved and the plane loses altitude.
This creates compounding risk: a plane that has accumulated 10× through multiplier pickups can be knocked down to 5× by a single rocket, then to 2.5× by a second rocket. Multiple rockets in a single round can transform a visually successful flight into a net loss. You cannot dodge, avoid, or predict rockets — they are randomized RNG events.
The closest analogy in our reviewed games is F777 Fighter‘s refueling bonus, but inverted. Where F777 Fighter’s tanker boosts your multiplier by 20-60%, Aviamasters’ rockets cut your balance by 50%. F777 Fighter adds surprise value; Aviamasters adds surprise punishment.
250× Max Multiplier: The Lowest Ceiling
Aviamasters’ 250× max multiplier is the lowest of any crash-adjacent game we’ve reviewed:
| Game | Max Multiplier |
|---|---|
| JetX | 25,000× |
| Balloon | ~10,000× |
| Rocket X | ~10,000× (disputed) |
| Goblin Run | 1,000× |
| Cappadocia | ~1,000× |
| Aviator | 100× |
| Aviamasters | 250× |
Note that Aviator’s 100× is technically lower, but Aviator reaches its cap relatively often due to simple rising-multiplier mechanics. Aviamasters’ 250× is a theoretical ceiling that requires accumulating multiplier pickups while dodging rockets across a full flight path — reaching it is extremely unlikely in practice. The confirmed Big/Mega/Super Mega win tiers are 20×, 40×, and 80× respectively, suggesting most successful flights cluster well below the 250× cap.
4 Speed Modes: Behavior Control, Not RTP Control
Aviamasters offers four speed settings, represented by icons: Turtle (slow), Walking Man (medium), Rabbit (fast), and Lightning (ultra-turbo). Speed does not change the RTP, the odds, or the probability distributions — it only affects how quickly rounds resolve visually.
Why this matters for bankroll: faster speeds mean more rounds per unit of time, which means faster variance. At 97% RTP, every round costs an expected $0.03 per $1 bet. At slow speed, you might play 60 rounds per hour. At ultra-turbo, you might play 300+ rounds per hour. Same RTP, 5× the hourly cost: $1.80/hour vs $9.00/hour at $1 bets. The speed selector is effectively a bankroll burn rate dial.
BGaming: Traditional iGaming Credibility
BGaming is a well-established game developer with Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) licensing — one of the most respected regulatory bodies in iGaming. This sets Aviamasters apart from most crash game developers:
| Developer | Game | Primary Licensing |
|---|---|---|
| BGaming | Aviamasters | MGA (Malta) |
| Spribe | Aviator | Curaçao + various |
| SmartSoft | JetX/Cappadocia | Georgia + iTech Labs |
| OnlyPlay | F777 Fighter | Curaçao |
| Evoplay | Goblin Run | Malta / Curaçao |
| 1Play | Lucky Jet/Rocket X | 1Win (self-regulated) |
MGA licensing means stricter regulatory oversight, mandatory RTP auditing, and stronger player protection requirements than Curaçao or self-regulated frameworks. For players who prioritize regulatory credibility, BGaming’s pedigree is Aviamasters’ strongest asset.
Aviamasters vs Standard Crash Games
| Feature | Aviamasters | Standard Crash Game |
|---|---|---|
| Player control | Bet size + speed only | Bet size + cashout timing |
| Multiplier source | Collected objects in flight | Rising counter (time-based) |
| Risk events | Rockets halve balance mid-round | Single crash ends round |
| Win condition | Plane lands on carrier | Cash out before crash |
| Lose condition | Plane lands in water | Fail to cash out before crash |
| Multiplayer | No (single-player) | Usually yes (shared crash) |
| Cashout button | ❌ No manual cashout | ✅ Core mechanic |
| Round duration | Variable (1-25 seconds) | Variable (1-60+ seconds) |
| Autoplay | ✅ With stop conditions | Varies by game |
| Speed control | ✅ 4 modes | ❌ (fixed pace) |
The fundamental distinction: in a crash game, the core skill is cashout timing. In Aviamasters, there is no cashout timing — the round resolves automatically. Your only strategic inputs are pre-round (bet size, speed, autoplay settings). Once the plane launches, you’re a spectator.
Aviamasters: Pros and Cons
✅ Strengths
- 97% RTP — matches top-tier crash games (Aviator, JetX)
- MGA licensed developer — BGaming has stronger regulatory credentials than most crash game studios
- Unique mechanics — rocket obstacles and multiplier pickups create genuine gameplay novelty
- 4 speed modes — rare player control over round pacing
- Autoplay with stop conditions — stop on win, loss, balance thresholds
- X-Mas variant — seasonal skin (Santa’s sleigh) keeps the game fresh
- Arcade feel — more visually engaging than minimal rising-line crash games
- Low min bet ($0.10) — accessible entry point
❌ Weaknesses
- 250× max multiplier — lowest ceiling of any crash-adjacent game; limits upside potential
- No manual cashout — removes the core crash game skill (timing); rounds resolve passively
- Rockets can’t be avoided — balance-halving events are pure RNG; no counterplay
- Not really a crash game — marketed in the category but mechanics are fundamentally different
- Single-player only — no shared crash point, no multiplayer tension, no chat
- Provably Fair status unclear — some sources claim it, others don’t; not confirmed by BGaming
- Preset bet values only — no custom bet amounts (can’t bet $1.10, for example)
Who Should Play Aviamasters
Play if: You want crash-game-adjacent entertainment without the stress of real-time cashout decisions, you prefer arcade-style gameplay where the outcome unfolds visually, you value MGA-licensed developer credibility, or you enjoy experimenting with speed modes and autoplay configurations.
Consider alternatives if: You want the core crash game experience of manual cashout timing (Aviator, JetX), you want higher max multiplier potential (JetX: 25,000×, Balloon: 10,000×), you want multiplayer with shared crash points, or you want Provably Fair verification you can check yourself.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Aviamasters a crash game?
It’s marketed as one, but the mechanics are fundamentally different. There’s no manual cashout button — the plane flies a randomized path and either lands safely (win) or crashes into water (lose). It’s closer to an arcade game with crash-game aesthetics. See our crash game mechanics guide for what defines a standard crash game.
What is the max multiplier?
250× according to BetUS and BGaming’s official documentation. Some affiliate sites claim higher, but the confirmed win tiers (Big: 20×, Mega: 40×, Super Mega: 80×) indicate that most wins cluster far below the theoretical ceiling.
What do rockets do in Aviamasters?
Rockets are mid-flight obstacles that halve your current round balance and reduce your plane’s altitude. Multiple rockets compound: 10× balance → rocket → 5× → second rocket → 2.5×. They cannot be dodged or predicted; they are pure RNG events built into the risk model.
Do speed settings affect RTP?
No. The four speed modes (Slow/Medium/Fast/Ultra-Turbo) only change how quickly rounds resolve visually. RTP remains 97% regardless. However, faster speeds mean more rounds per session, which increases your effective hourly cost at the house edge.
Who made Aviamasters?
BGaming, an MGA-licensed (Malta Gaming Authority) developer known primarily for slots and table games. BGaming brings stronger regulatory credentials than most crash game studios. Aviamasters was released in July 2024.
