Understanding Aviator Game Mechanics
Every Aviator round follows the same cycle. You select your stake amount from a range we set per session, then place your bet. The round begins, and the multiplier on screen starts at rules and climbs continuously. The plane graphic animates upward in sync with the rising multiplier. At any moment, you can click the "Cash Out" button to lock in your current multiplier and collect your winnings—your original stake multiplied by whatever the multiplier shows at cash-out. The instant you cash out, that round outcome is fixed.
The crash happens when the plane disappears from the screen. We generate the crash point using a certified random seed before each round begins. If your stake is still active when the crash occurs—meaning you haven't cashed out—the round ends in a loss, and your stake is forfeited. There is no partial recovery after a crash. The game then immediately moves to the next round, and you can place a new stake.

The multiplier increments are continuous, not in fixed steps. This creates a smooth visual experience but demands quick decision-making. Multipliers can reach double digits, triple digits, or higher depending on where the crash point is seeded. A crash might happen at rules on one round, then 47.3 on the next. There is no pattern, no memory between rounds, and no way to predict the exact crash point in advance.
Betting Mechanics and Stake Sizes
We set minimum and maximum stake limits per session. You can place a single stake per round. The stake amount determines the size of your potential payout at any given multiplier. If you stake our welcome offer and cash out at rules, you receive our welcome offer (your stake plus our welcome offer profit). If you stake our welcome offer at the same multiplier, you receive our welcome offer. The multiplier itself is not tied to stake size—both players see the same flight and crash point, but their cash-out values differ because their stakes differ.
We allow you to place multiple stakes across consecutive rounds. A common approach is repeating the same stake over several rounds or adjusting it based on recent outcomes. Some players stake less after a loss, others adjust upward after a win. Stake adjustments are entirely your choice and have no impact on the game's crash point algorithm.
Provable Fairness and Game Transparency
Each Aviator round is backed by a server seed and a client seed. Before a round begins, you see the hashed server seed. After the round crashes, we reveal the unencrypted server seed. You can combine your client seed with the revealed server seed through a one-way hash function (SHA-256) to verify that the crash point matches what our system generated. This is the standard provably fair model used across crash games globally.
Transparency is verifiable, not assumed
We publish the seed-hash before each round. After the round ends, any player can re-run the hash verification offline using publicly available tools to confirm the crash point was not altered after the fact.
Strategy Considerations and Session Management
Because Aviator outcomes are purely random and independent, no betting system can guarantee long-term profit. Each round's crash point has no relationship to previous crashes. Strategies that worked in past sessions are not more likely to work in future sessions. However, we share some observations about how players approach bankroll and cash-out timing.
One common framework is the target-exit strategy: you decide in advance what multiplier you want to hit (e.g., 2.5x or 4.0x), and you cash out automatically when the multiplier reaches that level. This removes emotion from the decision. Some players use an even tighter approach, cashing out very early (1.1x to 1.5x) on every round to lock in small, frequent wins. Other players tolerate longer flights in hopes of rarer, larger payouts. Neither approach is statistically superior because the crash point is not influenced by stake size, previous outcomes, or cash-out patterns.
Session bankroll management is important. If you allocate a specific amount to Aviator gameplay on a given day, stick to that allocation. Treat each round as independent and avoid chasing losses by increasing stakes after a crash. We offer deposit and withdrawal through multiple payment channels across Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Medan, and Semarang, so you can manage account balance easily. If you need to check your transaction history, our account dashboard displays every deposit, withdrawal, and stake result with settlement times and payment method used.
Account Features and Support
Your dewacash link account gives you access to game history, session summaries, and detailed transaction logs. You can review individual Aviator rounds, see your stake amounts, cash-out multipliers, and profit or loss per round. This historical data helps you understand your own patterns without relying on prediction models. We also provide multilingual customer support via live chat during most hours to answer questions about game rules, account features, or deposit and withdrawal processes. Response times vary by inquiry complexity, but we aim to address standard questions within your active session.
- Round ID
- A unique identifier for each Aviator flight, visible in your history after the round ends. Use this to cross-reference your notes or request support confirmation.
- Multiplier Lock
- The exact multiplier at which you cashed out, recorded to the second decimal place. This value is immutable once recorded.
- Game Hash
- The cryptographic hash linking your round to the server seed. Download and verify after any round using third-party SHA-256 tools.

