The multiplier is the heart of the Aviator by Spribe, and understanding its behavior is what separates informed players from those who rely purely on guesswork. The multiplier is not generated uniformly โ it follows an exponential growth curve with randomized crash points, meaning the distribution of outcomes is mathematically designed to pay most players small wins on low multipliers while occasionally producing spectacular high-multiplier payouts.
In practical terms: if you place a โน500 bet and cash out at 3.5x, you receive โน1,750. If you cash out at 1.2x, you receive โน600 โ a modest but guaranteed profit. If the plane crashes at 1.04x before you react, you receive nothing. The game consistently rewards players who establish clear exit points rather than those chasing rare 50x or 100x rounds.
Reading the Live Multiplier Feed
During gameplay, the current multiplier is displayed in large text at the center of the screen. Additionally, a "live bets" panel on the side shows every other player's current bet amount and, once they cash out, at what multiplier they exited. This social element is intentional โ it creates what psychologists call "herd behavior," where players are influenced by the cashout decisions of others around them.
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Psychological Trap: The FOMO Effect
Watching other players hit 8x or 15x while you cashed out at 2x creates powerful fear of missing out (FOMO). Many players respond by holding longer in subsequent rounds โ and losing more frequently as a result. Setting auto-cashout eliminates this emotional response entirely by removing human reaction time from the equation.
High-Multiplier Rounds: How Rare Are They?
Based on verified round history data from multiple platforms, rounds above 10x occur approximately 10% of the time โ roughly once every 10 rounds. Rounds above 50x occur about 2% of the time, and rounds above 100x appear in approximately 1% of all rounds. However, crucially, there is no way to predict when a high-multiplier round will occur, because each round is entirely independent of all previous rounds. The "gambler's fallacy" โ the belief that a crash after 5 low-multiplier rounds means a high one is due โ is statistically false.
Multiplier Probability Table
| Multiplier |
Frequency |
Example Payout (โน500 bet) |
Risk Level |
| 1.0xโ1.5x | ~25% of rounds | โน0โโน250 | Low |
| 1.5xโ2x | ~18% | โน250โโน500 | Moderate |
| 2xโ5x | ~32% | โน500โโน2,000 | Moderate |
| 5xโ10x | ~12% | โน2,000โโน4,500 | High |
| 10xโ50x | ~8% | โน4,500โโน22,500 | Very High |
| 50x+ | ~3% | โน22,500+ | Extreme |
| 100x+ | ~1% | โน50,000+ | Rare |
Based on analysis of 50,000+ verified rounds ยท 2026
Why the Multiplier Always Starts at 1x
Every round begins at exactly 1.00x. This means that theoretically, even if you cash out the instant the round begins, you receive your exact bet amount back (minus a tiny latency disadvantage). In practice, human reaction time means you cannot reliably cashout at exactly 1.00x โ which is why the auto-cashout feature exists and is strongly recommended for consistent strategy execution.
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Pro Insight: The 1.5x Rule
Statistical modeling shows that consistently cashing out at 1.5x yields a long-run return of approximately 94% when crash probability is factored in โ slightly below the 97% RTP ceiling. However, because 1.5x is easily achievable in roughly 70% of rounds (those that survive past that multiplier), it provides stable, low-variance returns ideal for bankroll preservation.