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Aviator and Crash Games at Rainbet

Updated on July 2, 2026 by the editorial team

Aviator and crash games at Rainbet swap spinning reels for a rising multiplier and a single, nerve-shredding decision: when to cash out before the round busts. You place a stake, a curve climbs from 1.00x, and the moment you press collect locks in your payout. Wait too long and the plane flies off or the rocket explodes, taking the bet with it.

This page breaks down how the round is built, how to time the exit, whether auto-bet actually helps, and which crash titles sit in the Rainbet library. All of it plays in AUD with deposits from A$20.

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Understand what happens in a single crash round

A crash round has three moving parts: your stake, a multiplier that grows in real time, and a hidden bust point. The multiplier starts at 1.00x and ticks upward. Somewhere along that curve the round ends without warning. Cash out before it does and your stake is multiplied by whatever number showed when you hit the button. Miss it and you lose the stake.

The bust point is not decided by the graphic. It is set the instant the round begins, using a provably fair system built from a server seed, a client seed and a nonce. The rising plane is just a stopwatch made visual. You can open the fairness panel after any round, plug the seeds into the verifier, and confirm the result was fixed before you ever placed the bet. That transparency is the reason crash games caught on: nothing about the outcome depends on what you do once the round is live.

Most crash games hover around a 97% RTP, so the house edge sits near 3% over the long run. Short sessions swing wildly around that figure. One quirk trips up newcomers: multiplying your stake by 2.00x only doubles your money, and a round that busts at 1.02x still counts as a win if you were already out. Small margins, real money.

The distribution matters as much as the average. Low multipliers land constantly, so most rounds end early, while the big double-digit flights are rare enough to feel like lightning. That shape is why a plan built on frequent small exits behaves so differently from one chasing the occasional 20x. Neither beats the edge, but they lose at very different speeds.

Rainbet runs these titles through its main games library, so the same account, wallet and A$20 minimum deposit apply here as everywhere else on the site.

Time your cash-out before the round busts

The exit is the whole game. Get greedy and the plane leaves without you. Bail at 1.10x every round and the rare crash below that point still drains your balance faster than the tiny wins refill it. So where do you press collect?

Pick a target multiplier before the round starts, not while the curve is screaming upward. A common approach is a fixed exit around 1.5x to 2x, which hits often enough to keep a session alive. Chasing 10x pays beautifully on the rare hit and quietly bleeds you on every bust in between.

Three habits that keep the timing honest:

  • Set the target first. Decide your cash-out number, then place the stake. Never renegotiate mid-flight.
  • Split the bet. Many crash games let you run two simultaneous stakes. Cash the first out early to bank a guaranteed return, and let the second ride toward a bigger number.
  • Watch the connection. A dropped signal at 8x is a lost bet. Play on a stable line and keep the auto-cash-out armed as a safety net.

The manual button feels thrilling. It is also where most losses come from, because human reaction time lags behind a multiplier that can jump from 3x to bust in a fraction of a second.

Set up auto-bet and pick a staking plan

Auto-bet takes your finger off the button. You lock in a stake, an auto-cash-out multiplier and a number of rounds, and the game fires the sequence without you. Combined with auto-cash-out, it removes the reaction-time problem entirely: the round exits at your chosen number every time, whether you blink or not.

The settings usually let you adjust stakes on the outcome of each round. After a loss you might increase the next stake by a set percentage to recover, and reset after a win. After a win you might do the reverse. These are staking plans, not edge-beaters. No sequence changes the built-in house edge, and a Martingale-style doubling chain runs into the table's max-bet ceiling and your own balance long before it guarantees anything.

A few staking approaches players actually use on crash:

PlanHow it worksWatch out for
Flat stakingSame stake every round, fixed low cash-out (1.5x-2x)Slow grind; variance still bites
Percentage of balanceStake a fixed % of your current balance each roundBets shrink after losses, so recovery is slow
Two-bet splitOne stake cashes early, one rides highThe high stake loses more often than it wins
Progression (Martingale)Raise the stake after a loss to claw it backHits the max-bet wall and empties balances fast

Set a session budget in AUD, a loss limit and a round count before you start auto-bet. Then let it run and stop when the count ends. The point of automation is discipline, not a shortcut to profit.

Browse the crash titles worth a spin

Aviator gets the headlines, but it is one of a whole shelf. The Rainbet catalogue carries crash-style games from Spribe, Pragmatic Play and several in-house style studios, each with its own theme and multiplier behaviour. The core mechanic stays the same; the dressing and the pace change.

GameStudioWhat sets it apart
AviatorSpribeThe original plane; dual bets, live chat and provably fair rounds
AviatrixAviatrixCustomisable jet skin and a rakeback loyalty layer
SpacemanPragmatic PlayAstronaut theme, 50% early cash-out feature, 96% RTP
JetXSmartSoftRetro jet, slow-build curve that suits patient exits
CrashVariousStripped-back rocket curve, fastest round pace

Try each in demo mode first. Spaceman rewards early exits, JetX suits a slower nerve, and Aviator's community chat makes the room feel busier. When you switch to real stakes, the welcome package of A$10,000 + 250 FS can extend your session, though crash games often contribute at a reduced rate toward the x40 wagering, so check the terms before you rely on them to clear a bonus. New here? Start with the quick sign-up and fund the account from A$20.

Get answers to the common crash questions

Are Aviator and crash games rigged?

No. Rainbet's crash titles use a provably fair system. Each round's bust point is fixed before the round starts from a server seed, your client seed and a nonce, and you can verify any result yourself afterward. The house edge is built into the roughly 97% RTP, not into individual rounds.

What multiplier should I cash out at?

There is no single right number. A fixed exit around 1.5x to 2x hits often and keeps a session running; higher targets pay more on the rare hit but bust in between. Decide your target before the round starts and stick to it rather than reacting to the live curve.

Does auto-bet improve my odds?

Auto-bet does not change the odds. It only automates your stake and cash-out so your exit fires on time every round, removing reaction-time slip. The house edge stays the same whatever staking plan you attach to it.

Can I use the Rainbet welcome bonus on crash games?

The welcome package of A$10,000 + 250 FS can be used across the casino, but crash games often count at a reduced rate toward the x40 wagering, which runs for 30 days. Read the bonus terms so you know how much each round contributes before you play.

What is the minimum bet to play Aviator at Rainbet?

Stakes start low and are set inside each game, so you can play small while you learn the timing. Your account funds from a A$20 deposit (A$30 to claim the welcome bonus), and the minimum withdrawal is A$30.

Paul Carter
Reviewed byPaul CarterCasino & bonus analyst

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