Aviatrix is a crash game with a metagame: you build, name and level up the plane you bet on, while the bet itself works exactly like Aviator. A multiplier climbs from 1.01x, you cash out before the crash, or the stake is gone.
The 30-second version
Aviatrix is a provably fair crash game with a 97% RTP, two bets per round, auto-cashout and a 10,000x ceiling, wrapped in the genre’s only NFT plane and XP metagame. It matches Aviator on every number that affects your return and trails it badly on reach: roughly 118 casinos against Spribe’s near-5,000 operators. Every plane upgrade is cosmetic, and nothing you build changes what the game pays back.
RTP
97%
House Edge
3%
Max Multiplier (€10K Cap)
10,000x
Provably Fair (SHA-512, 3 Seeds)
Yes
Unique Feature
NFT + XP
Licence
MGA
⚡ How Aviatrix works
An Aviatrix round is textbook crash. You stake during a betting window of about five seconds, a biplane takes off, and a multiplier climbs from 1.01x. Cash out before the plane flies away and you collect stake times multiplier; wait too long and the stake is gone. A round can end at 1.00x before anyone collects, and any successful exit pays at least 1.01x.
You can run one or two bets per round through twin betting consoles, each with its own stake and its own exit. Two bets split your risk across the same flight; they do not improve it. Whether running both consoles ever makes sense is covered properly in our dual-bet strategy guide.
Stakes start around $0.10, with operator-set maximums commonly in the $100 region. Wins are capped operator-side too, typically in the €10,000 region, far below the on-paper ceiling: a maximum stake riding the full 10,000x would run to seven figures, and that is precisely the outcome the cap exists to prevent.
- Auto-bet. Set a stake and a number of rounds and the game fires them without you.
- Auto-cashout. Pre-set an exit multiplier and the bet banks itself the instant the curve touches it.
- Stop-win and stop-loss. Session thresholds that end an autoplay run the moment they are hit.
- Plane rotation. Autoplay can cycle between your customised aircraft from round to round, a flourish only a game with a hangar could offer.
⚙️ NFT planes and XP: the metagame
What no other crash game gives you is a persistent plane. Through the Build feature you customise the body, wings and propeller colours, give the aircraft a name, and fly it round after round; it is tied to your account and waiting when you come back. Judged purely as engagement design, it is genuinely novel rather than a reskin.
📖 Definition
In Aviatrix, an NFT plane is a persistent digital item bound to your player account. It records your customisation and level and follows you between sessions. The studio frames the planes as NFTs, but on the casino product they are not blockchain assets you can freely sell or trade.
The XP economy
Every euro wagered earns one XP, levels unlock new plane models, and daily and seasonal tournaments run alongside, with prize pools the studio pitches at million-euro scale. None of it touches the mathematics. Co-founder Mikalai Pobal has said it plainly: the upgrades are “purely cosmetic”. The plane changes how the game looks and how it feels to return to, not the crash point, the return, or any probability in the machine.
“You own the plane. The house still owns the maths.”
The marketplace that is not there yet
The headline promise of tradeable planes remains, as of mid-2026, a promise. The in-game marketplace has sat under construction for years. A separate web3 build, Aviatrix.xyz, launched in July 2024 on the Scorum-linked Cosmos blockchain with planes that do trade against the SCR token, but that is a different product: nothing you earn in the casino game can be sold on an open market.
Be clear about what the XP ladder is, too: a retention mechanic. It pays a point per euro wagered whether the bet wins or dies, which makes it a progress bar bolted to a negative-expectation product, rewarding volume and nothing else.
Mechanics built to keep you wagering deserve more than a passing mention. We cover the research evidence, the risk factors and what regulators are doing in a dedicated guide: crash gambling and player harm.
🏢 The studio behind the plane
Aviatrix the game is the entire output of Aviatrix the studio, a Limassol, Cyprus company founded in 2021 that rode one title from launch to an industry award inside two years. Co-founders Mikalai Pobal, previously a co-founder of TimeToDevelop, and CEO Vladislav Artemyev, a co-founder of the Scorum blockchain project, built the company around this single product. The Scorum thread is no coincidence: it resurfaces in the web3 spin-off above.
Only lately has the catalogue widened, with side titles such as Second Chance and Fruits and a Mines-style game trailed to follow. The milestones that matter sit on one short line:
The studio forms in Limassol
A small iGaming team sets up in Cyprus with one game as the whole plan.
Aviatrix launches
The crash game goes live and begins collecting aggregator and operator deals.
SiGMA Europe names it Best New Casino Game
An SBC Rising Star listing lands alongside it; the industry stops filing the game under Aviator clones.
EGR Game of the Year
Two years after launch, the single-game studio takes one of the industry’s headline honours at the EGR Operator Awards.
📝 For the record: Aviatrix’s own About page dates the studio to 2021, with the game launching in October 2022, yet one co-founder interview places the company’s origins back in 2017. We treat 2021 as the operative date. The studio is also no relation to the American cloud-networking firm that shares its name.
📊 RTP and house edge: the real number
Aviatrix returns 97% of everything staked over the long run, a 3% house edge, and nothing you do in the hangar moves either number. The figure is an operator-side setting rather than a constant: official and operator sources agree on the default, and one tracker has recorded live deployments from 96.7% up to 98.8%. The in-game info panel at your casino is the version that applies to your bets, so read it before you stake.
🔍 Worth noting
You will find pages claiming Aviatrix pays 98%. Every one we traced is a low-authority SEO landing site, and the same pages credit the game to a studio called BigGame Solutions, which does not exist. The official ecosystem and every credible operator listing agree on the lower figure. The provider’s canonical site is aviatrix.bet; treat anything else carrying the name with suspicion.
At the default setting the game costs about $3 per every $100 wagered, and the cost is target-proof. Expected value equals your stake minus the house’s cut at whatever multiplier you aim for, a result we derive in full in the crash gambling maths guide. Most rounds end below the 5x to 10x band, and under the standard crash model an instant 1.00x bust prices at roughly 1 in 33 rounds.
Here is what the published return implies for any target you set:
Probabilities are the published return divided by the target; if your operator runs a different setting, every row scales with it.
The bottom line: every row pays the same $0.97 per $1 staked. Your target decides how often you win and how big, never what the game keeps, and a thousand $1 rounds costs about $30 in expectation whichever style you play.
🛡️ Provably fair: the three-seed model
Every Aviatrix crash point is fixed before takeoff by hashing one server seed with the client seeds of the round’s first three bettors under SHA-512. The result is sealed before the plane moves, so neither the operator nor any single player can steer where it ends. Open the round’s data window and you can recompute the hash with any SHA-512 tool; independent checks across more than 100 rounds have turned up no mismatches.
It is structurally the same model Spribe built for Aviator, while most of the genre hashes a single client seed with SHA-256. On fairness architecture, Aviatrix sits at the gold standard rather than beneath it. What that cryptography promises, and what it pointedly does not, is the subject of provably fair explained, and because the seed model matches Aviator’s, our step-by-step verification walkthrough applies to Aviatrix without modification.
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📈 Where Aviatrix is available
Aviatrix reaches the market through most of the major aggregators and sits in roughly 118 casinos: a real footprint, and a fraction of the leader’s. Distribution runs through Games Global, QTech Games, Hub88, iGP’s iGaming Deck, Relax Gaming and LuckyStreak, and the game is live at operators including 1xBet, 1win, Mostbet, 888Starz, Megapari and the Wildz group of Wildz, Spinz and Caxino.
The studio’s own numbers claim around 265 million bets a month from more than 170,000 daily players. Those are marketing figures rather than audited ones, and we treat them that way.
On paper the licensing spread is broad: certifications or approvals across Romania, Spain, Peru, Greece, Italy, Georgia, the Netherlands, Ontario, Sweden, Colombia, South Africa, Brazil including Paraná, and Estonia, with the USA and Slovakia in progress. The game is MGA-certified, though the specific licence number is not verifiable in public sources, and testing comes from iTech Labs, Gaming Associates Europe and Asensi Technologies, with compliance handled by BetComply. A UKGC licence is not claimed anywhere, and no source places Aviatrix with UK-licensed operators.
🏆 Aviatrix vs Aviator
Aviatrix matches Aviator on the numbers and loses to it on the map. Spribe’s Aviator, covered in depth in our Aviator guide, took the crash format mainstream in 2019 and still defines it; Aviatrix arrived in late 2022 with the same mathematical chassis and a flashier fuselage. Here is the head-to-head:
Read the rows and the pattern is plain. Everything that decides your return is level: the published figure, the seed model, the bet format. Everything that decides reach is not, and the audience rows are not even the same metric, daily players on one side and monthly on the other, yet the gap survives any honest reading at one to two orders of magnitude.
The gap is a distribution story. Spribe feeds roughly 5,000 operators and holds the licences to match, including a UK software licence Aviatrix does not, while Aviatrix is still climbing the aggregator ladder it joined in 2022. That is the whole verdict in one line: a genuine competitor on product, a niche alternative on scale.
💡 Key insight
Aviatrix matches Aviator on every number that costs you money and differs on every feature that does not. Pick it for the hangar, the tournaments and the novelty, never for an edge: there is none to be had in either game.
For the wider field, our guide to choosing a crash game sets Aviatrix against twenty other titles on the axes that actually matter.
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💡 Common mistakes and practical tips
Most Aviatrix mistakes come from taking the wrapper seriously and the maths casually. Four habits cover nearly all of it:
- Treat unlocks as a by-product, never a target. XP accrues at one point per euro wagered, win or lose, so grinding toward a new plane model means paying the house’s standard cut for a cosmetic. If a level arrives, enjoy it; do not chase it.
- Trust the info panel, not the marketing. The return is an operator-side setting, and the figure printed in your casino’s game client is the only one that applies to your bets.
- Decide before the window opens. Five seconds of betting time is not thinking time, so fix your stake, your target and your session limits in advance and let auto-cashout do the clicking.
- Run two bets as a split, not a system. Twin consoles reshape a session’s swings and double a round’s exposure, and they leave the expected return exactly where it was.
⚠️ Scam alert: Aviatrix’s name is heavily squatted. Several official-looking sites credit the game to studios that do not exist, inflate the return figure and invent launch dates. The provider’s only canonical site is aviatrix.bet, and the only game facts that bind your bets are the ones in the in-game info panel.
❓ Aviatrix FAQ
Quick answers to the questions players actually ask.
What is the RTP of Aviatrix?
97% as standard, for a 3% house edge. The setting is operator-configurable, with live deployments recorded from 96.7% to 98.8%, so the in-game info panel at your casino is the figure that counts. The 98% you may see elsewhere traces to unreliable SEO pages.
Is Aviatrix provably fair?
Yes. Each crash point is derived from one server seed plus the client seeds of the round’s first three bettors, hashed with SHA-512 before the round starts, and any player can recompute the hash to verify the result. It is the same architecture Aviator uses.
Are Aviatrix NFT planes worth anything?
Not in money. On the casino product the planes are account-bound cosmetics: they hold your customisation and level, persist between sessions, and have no effect on the return, the crash point or your win probability, and no cash value.
Can you trade Aviatrix planes?
Not in the casino game, where the promised marketplace has yet to launch. A separate web3 version, Aviatrix.xyz, went live in July 2024 on a Cosmos-based blockchain with planes that trade against the SCR token, but that is a different product from the game at casinos.
How does Aviatrix compare to Aviator?
They are mechanical peers: the same return, the same three-seed SHA-512 fairness model, the same dual-bet format. Aviatrix adds the NFT and XP metagame; Aviator holds a footprint and audience one to two orders of magnitude larger and a three-year head start.
Is Aviatrix safe to play?
It is fair and verifiable: provably fair round by round, MGA-certified and tested by labs including iTech Labs. Safe does not mean beatable, though. The house edge applies to every bet, so treat sessions as paid entertainment and play only at licensed operators.
