Aviator and Crash Games at Betpanda
Updated on June 17, 2026 by the editorial team
Aviator and crash games at Betpanda put a single decision in front of you: get out before the line snaps. A multiplier climbs from 1.00x, a curve rises across the screen, and your job is to cash out before it crashes. That is the whole game. No reels, no paylines, just nerve and timing against a number that keeps rising until it doesn't.
This page covers how the round actually works, which crash titles are worth your first £10, how the auto-bet panel saves you from chasing, and the cash-out habits that keep a session from going sideways. Betpanda runs the BGaming crash originals plus a handful of clones from its other studios, all under a Costa Rica licence.
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How crash games like Aviator work
A round begins. A plane (or a rocket, or a rising bar) lifts off, and a multiplier ticks upward from 1.00x. The longer it flies, the bigger your stake multiplies. Then, at some random point, it crashes. If you cashed out first, you keep the multiplier you locked in. If you didn't, the stake is gone.
The crash point is set before the round even starts. A server seed and a client seed get hashed together to produce the number, and you can verify it after the round closes. This is the provably fair system, and it is the reason these games caught on. You are not trusting a casino's word that the round was honest. You can check the math yourself once the hash is revealed.
What makes a crash game different from a slot is the social layer. Every player in the round shares the same plane. A live feed shows other bets cashing out in real time, some bailing at 1.20x, a few holding for 50x. You see the wins land and the losses pile up as the line keeps climbing. It pulls you in, which is exactly why a firm exit plan matters more here than almost anywhere else on the site.
One more wrinkle: most crash games let you place two bets in the same round. You might cash the first out early to lock a small win, then let the second ride for a bigger target. We will come back to that under strategy.
Top crash titles (TABLE)
Aviator is the name everyone knows, but it is one game among several. Betpanda's lobby carries the BGaming crash builds plus crash-style titles from its other studios. Here is how the main games stack up.
| Game | Studio | Max multiplier | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Space XY | BGaming | Up to ~10,000x | Rising rocket with a clean auto-cash panel |
| Crash | BGaming | Up to ~25,000x | Simple curve, fast rounds, low minimum |
| Plinko-style crash | BGaming | Varies | Dual bets, live feed, provably fair |
| Crash hybrids | Spinomenal | Varies | Mixed mechanics for players who want variety |
If you have never touched a crash game, start with Space XY or BGaming's Crash. Both use a single rising line and a one-tap cash-out, so there is less to track while you learn the rhythm. The dual-bet titles reward you once you are comfortable juggling two stakes at once.
Bets start small. You can open a round for around £0.10 on most of these titles, which means a £10 deposit buys you a long session to find your feet. The welcome offer of 100% up to £1,000 + 100 FS gives the bankroll a lift too, though free spins apply to slots, not the crash curve.
Auto-bet and strategy
The auto-bet panel is where crash games get interesting. Instead of clicking through every round, you set rules and let the game run them. Two settings do the heavy lifting: auto-bet (the stake fires automatically each round) and auto-cash-out (the bet closes the instant the multiplier hits your target).
Say you set auto-cash-out to 1.50x. Every round, the game grabs your win the moment the line touches 1.50, win or lose, no hesitation, no chasing. That removes the single biggest leak in crash play: greed. The plane is still climbing, your finger hovers, you wait one more second, and it's gone. Auto-cash-out kills that instinct stone dead.
The dual-bet setup opens up the real strategy. Run two bets per round with different targets:
- Bet one at a low target, say 1.30x to 1.50x. It hits most rounds and slowly grows the bankroll.
- Bet two at a higher target, 3x or 5x or more. It loses often but pays for the dry spells when it lands.
This is not a system that beats the house. Nothing does. Crash games carry an RTP in the high 90s, which means the casino keeps its small edge over time no matter how clever the panel settings are. What good strategy buys you is control: longer sessions, fewer impulsive blow-ups, and a clear stop point. Set a loss limit before you start. When the auto-bet panel hits it, walk.
A note on the so-called martingale loop, where you double your stake after every loss to claw it all back on one win. It looks tidy on paper. In practice a run of low crashes drains a bankroll fast and slams into the table's max bet. During bonus wagering, the £5 max bet rule caps you hard, so a doubling strategy stalls out almost immediately. Flat stakes are calmer and they last.
How to cash out in time
Cashing out is the only skill the game actually tests. Everything else is the random number generator. Here is the routine that keeps you on the right side of it.
- Pick your target before the round starts, not while the line is climbing. A target chosen mid-flight is a target chosen by adrenaline.
- For manual play, keep your cursor on the cash-out button the second the round opens. The window between a good multiplier and a crash can be a fraction of a second.
- Use auto-cash-out for anything below 2x. Human reflexes are slower than you think, and at low multipliers the round can end before you react.
- Bank the early bet. With dual bets, take the first one at 1.30x to 1.50x almost every round. A steady stream of small wins steadies the bankroll for the swings.
- Set a session ceiling and a session floor. Hit either one and close the tab. Crash games are built to keep you in the next round, so the discipline has to come from you.
The hardest rounds are the ones right after a big crash that paid 50x to the players who held. You watch that and want the same. The next round crashes at 1.02x. The line does not remember what just happened, and neither should you. Each round is sealed and independent, hashed before you ever placed the bet.
When you do bank a win, getting it off the site is quick. Crypto withdrawals through Betpanda usually clear within 24 hours, the minimum cashout is £20, and you can pull up to £4,000 a day. Full timings sit on the withdrawal times page.
FAQ
Is Aviator rigged or can I trust the crash point?
Crash titles run on provably fair tech. The crash point is generated from a server seed and a client seed, hashed before the round begins, and you can verify it once the hash is revealed afterwards. The casino cannot change the result mid-round. Betpanda operates under a Costa Rica licence, and the crash games come from established studios like BGaming.
What is the smallest bet on crash games at Betpanda?
Most crash titles open a round from around £0.10, so a small bankroll stretches a long way. A £10 deposit covers dozens of rounds while you learn the timing. To switch on the welcome bonus you would need to deposit £20 instead.
Can I use the welcome bonus on Aviator?
The welcome offer is 100% up to £1,000 + 100 FS. The matched cash can be wagered, but the 100 free spins apply to slots rather than crash games. Check the bonus terms before you start, since wagering runs at x40 with a £5 max bet while you clear it, which limits crash stakes during that window. See the games hub for what counts toward wagering.
Does an auto-cash-out strategy beat the house?
No. Auto-cash-out is a discipline tool, not an edge. It locks your exit at a fixed multiplier so you stop chasing, but the game keeps its built-in house edge over the long run. It makes sessions calmer and more consistent, not profitable by design.
How fast can I withdraw crash winnings?
Crypto withdrawals usually land within 24 hours. Visa and Mastercard take 1 to 3 business days, and SEPA bank transfers run 2 to 3 business days. The minimum withdrawal is £20, with a £4,000 daily cap. New accounts clear KYC, normally inside 24 hours, before the first payout.
