Aviator logo Aviator India Guide
EN HI
How It Works • Crash Game • EN

How Aviator works: a simple explanation for beginners

Aviator is a crash game: the multiplier rises, and you can cash out before it ends. That’s it—simple rules, fast rounds, and strong emotions. This page explains cash out, auto cashout, and why “two bets” and discipline are popular, without pretending there’s a secret formula.

The basic loop

You place a bet, the multiplier starts climbing, and you decide when to cash out. If you cash out before the crash, you win based on the multiplier. If the crash happens first, the bet is lost. The tension is that the crash can happen at any time—so the game rewards calm decisions.

Cash out vs auto cashout

Manual cash out is simple but emotional. Auto cashout can reduce impulsive choices: you set a target, and the game cashes out automatically if the multiplier reaches it. Many players like auto cashout because it helps them stick to a plan, especially in fast sessions.

Two bets: why people use it

Some platforms allow two simultaneous bets. Players often use one conservative cash out and one riskier target. This is not a guarantee; it’s just a way to structure risk. If you try it, keep stakes small until you understand how it feels.

What “good play” looks like

Good play is boring: small bets, clear stop-loss, and time limits. Chasing is the opposite: increasing bets to recover quickly. If you feel that impulse, pause or switch to demo.

Start safely

Begin with demo mode, then small bets. If you deposit via UPI, keep your proof habits. If anything goes pending, use structured support templates instead of panic retries.

Small clarity that saves time

When you keep your steps consistent—same device, stable network, and clear records—most “mysterious” issues become easy to solve. If you ever need support, screenshots plus timestamps will beat long explanations every time.

Internal navigation