Aviatrix: Design And Theme
🖼️ Graphics
Visually, Aviatrix is built around a single plane and a long horizon, but the backdrop keeps changing. Early flights take place above a dusty runway with wind turbines and a hangar where other machines are parked. As rounds go by, the scene gradually moves from the ground into the sky and then into space: planets, asteroids and stars appear in the background, while the main focus stays on the large plane and the current multiplier in the centre.
On the right, there is a panel with other players’ planes and their results, and at the bottom, a bar with previous multipliers stretches across the screen.
🎶 Sound
The sound design is fairly lively: a dynamic tune plays in the background without getting intrusive, a countdown with a characteristic ticking is added at the end of the prep timer, and the take-off is marked by an engine roar.
When the crash happens, a short, explosive effect underlines the breaking point of the line. Auto Cash Out and successful cashouts are marked by separate short clicks, so the key moments of the round do not always have to be tracked visually.
Mechanics Aviatrix
|
💰 Bet Range |
1–100 |
|
📈 Multiplier Range |
x1–x10,000 |
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🎮 Bets Per Round |
2 |
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⏱ Auto Cash Out |
✅ |
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🔁 Autoplay |
✅ |
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📊 Multiplier History |
✅ |
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🎁 Bonus Features |
✅ |
Game Functions And Modes
At the core of Aviatrix, there is one shared flight and one shared multiplier for everyone, but around this setup, several modes are added that handle both bet control and account progression.
- Auto Cash Out: in the field next to each stake, a multiplier can be set at which the system cashes out automatically. The limit can be fixed in advance without trying to catch the exact moment manually.
- Autoplay and stop conditions: in the autoplay menu, a number of rounds is selected, and below that, three stop triggers are configured: total win higher than a chosen amount, total loss above a set limit, or a single win that exceeds a specified threshold.
- Plane building (Build): a customisation screen opens via a separate button, where the body and detail colours are chosen along with the plane’s name. After saving, the aircraft is linked to the account and appears in the list of skins; its look is visible both to the player and to other participants in the round.
- Levels and XP: for a custom plane, progression is enabled – each bet awards experience points, and the level bar is shown in the top-left corner. As the level grows, new colour schemes and decorative elements are unlocked, which can be equipped in the editor.
- Promos and free bets: in the Promos tab, temporary offers appear — free bets with a fixed nominal, tasks for a certain number of rounds or multipliers, and in-game raffles. All of this is tied to the existing bets in Aviatrix and works as an extra layer on top of the base gameplay.
RTP, Volatility, Maximum Win
RTP is 97%. Volatility is not officially stated, but by the standards of the genre, it feels high. The maximum win is capped at x10,000 of the stake.
Our Verdict
Aviatrix comes across as a crash format that tries not to stop at bare multipliers. The core flight is fairly straightforward: one plane, one shared multiplier, a short betting window between rounds and frequent low results around x1.20–x2.00, where balance can drain in streaks if cashouts are too greedy. Two independent bets and Auto Cash Out help spread the risk — one line can be closed early while the other hunts for more ambitious values.
The level system, plane customisation and promo tab add a sense of long-term progress: flights stop feeling like isolated rounds and turn into gradual development of a personal plane. This does not change the maths or make the risk lower, but it keeps the format from feeling too dry.
For those who prefer a simpler layout without levels and cosmetic tweaks, something more straightforward from the crash segment may suit better — for example, Big Bass Crash with its fishing theme or JetX with a stripped-down interface and two bets available in every session.