Aviator is the crash game that defined modern Indian gaming — and for good reason. A plane takes off, a multiplier climbs from 1.00x upward, and your only job is to cash out before the plane flies away and the round busts. It sounds simple, but the gap between players who consistently grow their bankroll and those who burn through it in minutes is enormous. That gap is almost entirely strategy and discipline, not luck. This guide gives you the framework to play on the right side of that divide on 365in's Aviator.
Understanding Aviator Mechanics First
Before any strategy makes sense, you need to understand exactly how Aviator determines its outcomes. Each round, before the plane even launches, the crash point is already calculated by a provably fair algorithm — a cryptographic random number generator whose output can be verified by any player after the round ends. The game then simply plays out the animation to match that predetermined crash point. This means two critical things: first, no amount of watching the screen or reading patterns can predict when the plane will crash, because the outcome was fixed before you could observe anything. Second, every round is completely independent — a crash at 1.01x does not make the next round more or less likely to reach a high multiplier.
The "provably fair" label is not marketing language. You can copy the seed values shown at the end of each round and independently verify, using the published algorithm, that the crash point was not altered. This is what separates provably fair games from traditional RNG games where you simply have to trust the operator. 365in's implementation is open to public verification, which is the highest standard of transparency available in online gaming.
The Conservative Strategy: 1.5x–2x Cash-Out
The most sustainable long-term approach for the majority of Aviator players is also the least exciting: cash out consistently at a low, achievable multiplier. The 1.5x–2x range offers the best balance of win frequency and stake growth.
Here is how this looks in practice with a ₹100 stake: at 1.5x, each successful cash-out returns ₹150 — a ₹50 profit. At 2x, you double your stake to ₹200. The mathematics are straightforward: at 1.5x, the vast majority of rounds will reach your target before crashing. At 2x, roughly half of rounds will. The more conservative your target, the more rounds you win — but each win is smaller. The key is that this approach produces consistent, compounding results rather than volatile swings.
Use the 1.5x–2x strategy when your primary goal is clearing a wagering requirement efficiently, when you are in a losing session and need to stabilise, or when you are learning the game and want low-risk repetitions to build confidence with the mechanics. Its advantages: low variance, predictable session outcomes, and slow but real bankroll growth over many rounds. Its limitations: you will never hit life-changing multipliers, and consecutive early crashes can still erode your session balance if you are unlucky.
The Two-Bet Strategy: Safe Bet Plus Speculative Bet
Aviator's unique feature is the ability to place two simultaneous bets per round. The two-bet strategy exploits this by splitting your round budget into a conservative bet and a speculative one. For example: allocate ₹80 to auto cash-out at 1.8x and ₹20 to let ride for a 10x+ target. The first bet covers most of your stake on most rounds; the second is a lottery ticket that costs very little per round but occasionally delivers a significant payout.
This strategy is effective because it manages the psychological pressure of watching a multiplier climb. When your conservative bet has already secured a profit, the decision to hold your speculative bet becomes much easier — you are playing with guaranteed profit rather than risking your original stake. Over many rounds, the consistent returns from the first bet compensate for the frequent losses on the second, and the occasional large multiplier from the speculative bet provides a meaningful upside that pure conservative play never achieves.
Configure your auto cash-out target before you begin playing and do not override it during the session. This removes emotion from the equation entirely — the game exits at your target whether you are watching nervously or not. Automation enforces your strategy automatically and prevents the most common mistake: hesitating and missing your window.
Auto Cash-Out: How and When to Use It
Auto cash-out is the most valuable mechanical feature in Aviator and is underused by beginners. To set it, tap the "Auto" tab in the betting panel before placing your bet. Enter your target multiplier and the game will cash out automatically the instant it is reached — with zero reaction time required. This eliminates the most common human error in Aviator: watching the multiplier climb past your intended exit point, frozen by indecision or greed, and then watching it crash.
Recommended auto cash-out targets by strategy: conservative players should set it at 1.5x or 1.8x for high-frequency winning rounds. Moderate players can use 2x–3x for a balance of frequency and payout size. Speculative players using the two-bet method should set the conservative bet's auto cash-out at 1.5x–2x and leave the speculative bet on manual. Never play Aviator without auto cash-out on at least one of your bets — the psychological benefits of removing the in-the-moment decision are enormous.
Bankroll Management for Aviator
No strategy survives reckless staking. The mathematics of Aviator work in your favour over many rounds if and only if you have the bankroll depth to absorb variance. Here is the framework:
- Session budget: Decide before you open the app how much you are willing to lose in this session. Never exceed this amount, even if you are "almost back to even."
- Bet sizing: Each individual bet should be 1%–5% of your session budget. If your session budget is ₹1,000, bet ₹10–₹50 per round. This ensures that a string of 10 consecutive early crashes — which does happen — does not wipe you out.
- Profit target: Set a target profit for the session. When you hit it, stop. Walking away up 30% or 50% of your session budget is a great result — there is no law that says you have to keep playing until you lose it back.
- Stop-loss: Define the maximum percentage of your session budget you will lose before stopping. 50% is a common threshold. Stopping at -50% preserves half your budget for the next session rather than chasing losses to zero.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Chasing big multipliers obsessively. Targeting 20x, 50x or 100x sounds exciting, but these multipliers are statistically rare. Building a strategy around them means long losing streaks between wins that erode your bankroll faster than the occasional big hit recovers it.
- Increasing bet size after losses. This is the classic martingale trap. Doubling your bet after every loss to "recover" eventually works — right up until the string of losses exceeds your bankroll depth and you hit zero. Flat betting is mathematically safer.
- Ignoring session limits. Deciding to "just play a few more rounds" after hitting your stop-loss is how sessions that should have ended at -₹300 end at -₹1,500.
- Playing on tilt. Emotional decision-making after a bad run leads to irrational bet sizes and abandoned strategies. If you have lost your stop-loss threshold, close the app and return tomorrow.
- Not using auto cash-out. Manual cash-out requires split-second decisions under emotional pressure. Most players cash out later than their strategy dictates because of greed or hesitation. Automate it.
Reading the Statistics Panel
Aviator displays a running panel of recent crash results along the top of the screen — typically the last 10–20 rounds. It is useful contextual information, but it must be interpreted correctly to be useful rather than misleading.
What the stats panel shows: the crash points of recent rounds, colour-coded by range. This lets you see at a glance whether the last stretch of rounds has been low (many early crashes) or high (several rounds reaching 5x+). What it cannot show: anything about the next round. Each round's crash point is independent, generated fresh by the algorithm. There is no "due" effect — a string of six early crashes does not mean a high multiplier is more likely. Players who act on a perceived pattern and bet heavily on "the next one must fly high" are engaging in a cognitive bias, not a strategy. Use the panel to understand the game's natural variance, not to predict outcomes. When you are ready to explore more of the crash game genre, browse our top games guide.
"The moment I stopped chasing 10x and started cashing out at 1.8x consistently, my bankroll started growing week by week." — Anonymous player, Mumbai



