How to Play Aviator –
Bet, Cash Out, Demo & Protection
The following sections are structured in the order you should experience them. At the end of this guide, you will understand what every control means, what auto functions can or cannot do for you, and when the demo mode remains the safest method to test your ideas.
// Contents
// The Basics
Aviator is built around a single cycle choice: place a bet before the plane takes off, then cash out before it lands or leaves the round. The visual of the aircraft may look simple, but the important features are the multiplier and the Cash Out button.
Even when the mechanics of the game are understood, new users often jump too quickly. This is why it makes sense to learn the interface sequentially: amount, confirmation, multiplier, cash out, result, history.
// Look at the Display
First, look at the flight display in the center of the interface. The flight multiplier is increasing while the plane is still flying, and the flight has not yet landed. There is no payment if you do not withdraw it during the flight.
Next, look at the control area. The stake panel is for entering the stake, confirming your bet, cashing out, and setting any automated settings. If you have access to two panels, the second one is not a shortcut: it is another stake.
The other elements – the chat panel, the history and leaderboard panels, the Rules section, and the fair game summary panel – are all useful when you are not playing. During a flight, however, they are usually a distraction.
Map out your screen like this: multiplier = value, Cash Out button = action, stake panel = exposure, history and rules = information. Avoid using information from secondary elements to help make a decision in a live flight.
// Set Your Stake
Enter your stake amount during the bet countdown. In the US dollar version, each casino may change the allowed stake range, so check this before playing.
Your stake is the amount you are exposed to lose from that panel during the round. It cannot affect when the plane lands, but the payout will vary based on your stake and the Cash Out multiplier.
When using two separate panels, add your amounts before placing your bet. It is not the stake amount of each panel that matters, but the combined stake amount of your total exposure.
Choose your stake amount before the game starts and keep it consistent during the session. Changing it mid-session because of a result from the previous flight is typically an early warning sign that you are losing focus.
// Place Your Bet
Once the countdown period is completed, accepted bets are placed. The flight multiplier starts at a low point and rises until the end of the round.
It does not matter how high the flight multiplier reaches. The important thing is whether your bet was withdrawn before the flight ended.
✅
Cashout success
Multiply the stake amount by the cashout multiplier, and then the payout is paid by the game.
❌
Exit missed
The plane has flown; your wager on that panel is gone.
// Keeping Tabs on the Multiplier Real Time
The multiplier is a living offer that changes every second. Cash it out before it vanishes.
If your $5 stake hits 1.40x, you take $7. If that stake rides to 2.20x, you can win $11.00, and only if the plane holds steady and you cash out in time.
That is the whole of Aviator; you are not hunting a timetable, you are assessing how much remaining time in the round is compatible with your risk appetite.
Do not equate the currently displayed multiplier to money in hand. A $5 bet at 2.00x is not worth $10.00 until collected. Until then, the entire $5 remains exposed.
// Aviator Controls & Round Data: What Each Function Does
Controls are few, but each of them affects the stake or timing of a round. Learn to play a single panel manually before adding multiple panels and Auto features.
Proper control use starts before takeoff. Decide how much you want to bet, what multiplier you seek, and where you stop; use the buttons to execute that plan.
Amount Control
Choose the amount for the selected panel.
Bet / Cancel
Place your bet before the takeoff; in many places, you may also cancel an already placed bet.
Cash Out
Take the current multiplier in flight.
Auto Cash Out
Set an amount that triggers an automatic Cash Out.
Auto Bet
Repeat bets according to parameters you define.
History / Fairness
Display round summaries and fairness data for review.
Practice all the buttons first. In a demo run, practice with one manual bet, one Auto Cash Out test, and one two-panel test before repeating these same actions for real money.
See it in action
Try the free demo to place a bet, watch the multiplier climb, cash out, and see a missed exit if it happens. Your objective should be to link each action with the correct outcome in the round history.
// Round Pace: Adjust to the Speed
Sometimes the game will play faster than it appears. A round ends, and the next cycle begins almost immediately. The game will offer another opportunity to place an entry almost instantly.
Give yourself a brief interval. Do not enter automatically after the results appear. After each result, pause a second, and re-check that the next bet still matches your bankroll and strategy.
🚶
Entry Window
Choose panel, amount, and target before clicking Bet.
🐇
Small Multiplier Phase
Smaller wins, but shorter window for the full amount to be at risk.
⚡
Rise Phase
More time adds more potential payout, while your entire stake remains exposed.
🔄
After round
Use the time to step back and re-evaluate before jumping on the next entry.
If the game feels faster than your decisions, walk away or use a demo run. Aviator is not a game for playing with real money on autopilot.
// Using Auto Bet and Auto Cash Out Correctly
Automated features can reinforce your discipline when used thoughtfully. They become dangerous when used to disengage your attention.
The Auto Cash Out can set a pre-determined stop point. The Auto Bet can execute repeated round entries and should always include a count, loss, or profit cap in its parameters.
Bet Count
The number of rounds automation may enter.
Fixed Stake
Sets the per-round amount for each automated entry.
Exit Multiplier
The value at which the Auto Cash Out will attempt to collect.
Profit Cap
Halts rounds after achieving a certain amount of gain.
Loss Cap
Halts rounds after reaching a certain loss threshold.
Any responsible auto configuration must be set up before its launch. Stake amount, target, bet count, profit cap, and loss cap should all be determined before you have a winning or losing result.
Never use the Auto Bet to try to recoup a missing flight. Playing more rounds quickly does not mitigate that risk; it just packs losses into a shorter time frame.
// Tackling the Interface
Interface usability is important because Aviator choices occur quickly. Remove anything that makes the current multiplier, the current stake, or the Cash Out button less visible.
📍
Active Panel Check
Ensure you are clear about which panel you are placing bets into or collecting from.
🔊
Target Visibility
If you are using Auto Cash Out, confirm the value before the round commences.
⚡
Audio Discipline
Use audio feedback only if it encourages attentiveness rather than anxiety.
📋
Balance Check
Monitor the balance between rounds so that the total cost of the session is always visible.
// Locating Game History and Provably Fair Information
The round history is useful to review decisions following the game. It is not a guide to the next multiplier.
Fairness and Rules panels are helpful if you need to confirm what verification, settlement, or technical suspension means.
📋
Recent Results
Lists completed multiplier values and settled rounds.
📄
Rules and Verification
Describes the game mechanics, fairness proofing, and settlement details.
Use this to confirm your result. If a result appears ambiguous, check the history and balance movement rather than guessing based on what you saw briefly.
// Playing on Mobile
Mobile play is convenient, but it can easily transform a planned session into mindless tapping. Approach mobile sessions as planned sessions.
👆
Button Reach
Make sure you can tap Cash Out easily without blocking the live value.
📱
Stable Layout
Use the mode where the multiplier, stakes, and buttons are visible.
📶
Network Quality
Avoid betting when the signal is poor or loading is very slow.
⚠️
No official standalone app
Skip any download apps, modified versions, or prediction services. Stick only to a regulated operator that clearly displays Spribe's Aviator as part of their website or official app.
// The Demo Version: What It Can and Cannot Do
In demo mode, the focus should be on mastering the mechanics before you start wagering real money.
✅
Use Demo To
Learn countdown timers, manual and automatic cash-outs, auto-targets, two-panel setups, mobile tapping, and the history feature.
❌
Do Not Use Demo To
Assume that a pattern is developing, that your perceived risk in practice matches the risk of actual stakes, or that your habit of making exaggerated practice bets is safe.
A productive demo session must be purposeful. Select a low virtual bet, explore one specific aspect at a time, and wrap up as soon as the mechanics feel familiar.
// The First Session in Practice: What to Expect
Your initial session should involve what the real money is designed for, but the approach to playing for real money can vary.
- Define your session bankroll and ensure it does not exceed your planned expenditure before launching the game.
- Cash out manually with the same wager on one panel until you feel comfortable doing it.
- Keep the second panel and Auto Bet function off until you feel confident in all the limit features.
- Stick to a predetermined session length by playing a specific number of rounds or for a set amount of time.
- Do your best to stop when the session is over, and do not check your results while the game is active.
You will know your session went well if you are able to articulate afterward the following: your reason for getting into it, when you intended to quit, and what ultimately made you quit.
// Typical Mistakes to Start Small
It is not hard for newbies to make mistakes early on: when your attention is on what you did on your last round rather than where you will be on this round.
Not setting any money limits or a budget cap
If you do not set your session budget in advance, small-stake rounds can pile up fast.
Making late decisions on when to take your money
Deciding to cash out after your bet has been made and the round is in progress introduces emotional strain.
The confusion of having two panels running
Two active wagers require twice the attention. You need to decide your total risk before using both.
Trying to find a pattern in the history results
If you are trying to use past results to predict what comes next, you are wasting your time. It does not help. The game does not work that way.
Gambling with negative emotions
Do not play longer than you planned when you feel anger, frustration, or excitement, and do not put more on the line because you feel this way.
Time for real money?
Look for licensed and regulated casinos. Check game integrity, mobile compatibility, deposit and withdrawal rules, bonus restrictions, and limit tools before depositing real money.
// Quick Guide: What Does Each Button Do?
Use this chart to help you check if you are familiar with how the page works.
Stake
This is the amount you bet on each screen.
Bet
This is a button to press to make a bet before the start of the countdown.
Cash Out
This collects your wager on an existing live round with your active multiplier.
Auto Cash Out
This option sets a multiplier at which you can set the game to automatically cash out.
Auto Bet
A button to automatically re-bet for multiple rounds, which you need to set risk limits first.
Second Panel
A place to make a different bet on top of the initial one.
History
You check this to see past rounds that have finished.
Fairness Tools
You check this for game verification, or for the general rules of play for Aviator.
Ready to Give It a Try
You have an understanding now of how Aviator takes you through placing a stake, watching the multiplier go live, cashing out, settlement, and finally checking results or going back to the demo to continue learning. Now you can apply that understanding so that you are playing slowly, within the law, and within budget. It is not meant to be a get-rich-quick scheme. You should not use it to make up for financial losses.
18+ | Play responsibly | Licensed platforms only
