GAME REFERENCE

Aviator Lives Right Here on angkasa 338

Aviator is one of the games Indonesia keeps coming back to on angkasa 338 — a crash-style round where your multiplier climbs and your read of the moment...

Crash Multiplier FormatReal-Time Cashout ControlDual Bet WindowsProvably Fair RoundsMobile-Ready Interface
angkasa 338 Aviator Lives Right Here on angkasa 338
angkasa 338 What Aviator Brings to Your Screen

What Aviator Brings to Your Screen

Aviator is a crash game developed by Spribe, a studio known for building titles that put decision-making front and centre. A plane climbs across your screen and a multiplier rises with it — you decide when to cash out before the round ends. There are no reels, no lines. Every round is independently verified through a provably fair system, so the outcome

is transparent and you can check it yourself after each flight.

EDITORIAL SPOTLIGHT

Aviator cards

angkasa 338 Multiplier Crash Mechanic
Core Format

Multiplier Crash Mechanic

The Aviator multiplier starts at 1× and climbs continuously each round. You choose when to lock...

angkasa 338 Two Bets Per Round
Dual Stake

Two Bets Per Round

Aviator lets you place two separate bets in one round with independent cashout timing. You can...

angkasa 338 In-Round Chat and Stats
Live Feed

In-Round Chat and Stats

While the multiplier climbs, a live sidebar shows recent round results and a running chat feed...

How Aviator Plays Round by Round

Aviator runs on a betting structure that rewards attention and timing above anything else. Four mechanics define how every session feels from your first round to...

Bet Placement Window

At the start of each round a short window opens for you to set your stake. You can adjust the amount freely before the plane lifts. Once the round launches your bet is locked and the multiplier begins its climb.

Auto-Cashout Setting

Aviator includes an auto-cashout field where you nominate a target multiplier in advance. When the live multiplier hits your number it cashes out automatically — useful when you want to hold a consistent strategy across many rounds.

Round Verification

Every Aviator round generates a provably fair seed that you can verify independently after the flight ends. The hash is visible in the round history panel so you can confirm the result was fixed before your bet was placed.

Mobile Bet Feel

On a phone the Aviator interface scales to a single-thumb layout. The cashout button stays central, the multiplier display is full-width, and the dual-bet panel stacks neatly below — the same round, the same control, smaller screen.

Aviator Transparency Figures at a Glance

These figures come directly from Spribe's published game sheet and reflect Aviator's certified configuration. We display them here so you can make an informed decision about how Aviator...

Game TypeCrash / Multiplier
Published RTP97%
VolatilityVariable — round length and multiplier ceiling shift each flight
Supported DevicesBrowser on Android, iOS and desktop — no download required in supported regions
MOBILE GAMING

Aviator on Your Phone, Any Time

The Aviator round fits a phone screen without any feature being stripped out. The multiplier graph scales to portrait mode, the cashout button is sized for a thumb, and both...

Portrait-Mode Multiplier Graph
Full Dual-Bet Panel on Mobile
Auto-Cashout Works on Phone
Round History in Browser
angkasa 338 mobile gaming
Google Play App Store
SUPPORT

Help With Your Aviator Session

If something feels off mid-round or you have a question about how a result was recorded, our support paths are open. Reach us through any channel below and quote your round ID for the fastest response.

Team online

Live Chat

Start a live chat directly from the Aviator lobby page. Share your round ID and our team can pull the session record, check the provably fair hash, and clarify the outcome with you in real time.

Email Support

Send a detailed message to our support address if your question relates to a round result you want reviewed thoroughly. Include your account ID and the round timestamp so we can locate the exact flight.

FAQ Panel

The in-game FAQ panel inside Aviator covers cashout timing, auto-cashout setup and round verification steps. Open it from the help icon in the top corner of the game window before contacting us.

REVIEW SIGNALS

Why Aviator Rounds Are Fair Here

Fairness in a crash game is not a claim — it is a verifiable mechanism. Here is what sits behind every Aviator round on angkasa 338.

Spribe Studio

Aviator is developed and maintained by Spribe, the studio that introduced the crash format to regulated lobbies. Their client-side game...

Provably Fair System

Before each round starts, a cryptographic seed is generated and hashed. After the round you can input that hash into...

RTP Certification

The 97% RTP figure for Aviator is certified by an independent testing laboratory and published by Spribe. It reflects the...

Round History Log

Every round you play in Aviator is logged in your account history with its multiplier result, your stake, and your...

Stable Connection Protocol

Aviator uses a persistent connection so a brief signal drop does not cancel your active round. If disconnection occurs while...

Access in Supported Regions

Aviator is available to accounts opened in supported regions where local law permits. Region eligibility is confirmed at account creation...

Aviator Alongside Other Games We Host

Choosing Aviator over another title is easier when you see what makes each format distinct. Here is how Aviator sits relative to the other game rooms on angkasa...

Aviator vs SlotsSlots use fixed reels and paylines; Aviator uses a live climbing multiplier. If you prefer a format where your cashout timing shapes the result rather than a spin outcome, Aviator is the different path.
Aviator vs Live BaccaratLive Baccarat is dealer-paced with a fixed round clock. Aviator rounds are shorter and self-paced — you decide when the round ends for you by hitting cashout, not by waiting for a card reveal.
Aviator vs RouletteRoulette resolves on a wheel spin with fixed odds per position. Aviator's multiplier has no fixed ceiling each round, so the potential return is open-ended — which also means the risk profile is different.
Aviator vs Dice GamesCrash-format titles like Aviator differ from dice games in that your entry and exit point both matter. In dice you set a number; in Aviator you watch a live curve and decide when to step off.
Aviator vs Sports BettingSports markets resolve on match outcomes over minutes or hours. An Aviator round resolves in seconds. If you want something fast between longer sports sessions, Aviator fits that gap neatly.
Aviator vs Video PokerVideo Poker hands are dealt and held with a defined strategy matrix. Aviator has no holding mechanic — every round is fresh, and your only decision is when to collect your climbing multiplier.
Aviator vs BlackjackBlackjack uses card counting logic and decision trees. Aviator strips the session down to one choice per round: hold or cash out now. It is a different kind of focus, not a lesser one.
PLATFORM SNAPSHOT

Six Things That Define Aviator

Aviator earns its place in our lobby because of specific mechanics, not just popularity. These six points explain what the game actually delivers in each session.

01
No Reels, No Lines Aviator removes the reel format entirely. There are no paylines to track and no symbol combinations to learn. The multiplier on the screen is the only number that matters, which keeps sessions very focused.
02
Sub-30-Second Rounds Most Aviator rounds complete within thirty seconds. This pace suits a session where you want multiple decisions across a short window — each round is self-contained and the next starts almost immediately.
03
Visible Round Outcome History The right side of the Aviator screen shows the multiplier results from recent rounds as colour-coded badges. You can read the last twenty results at a glance without opening a separate history panel.
04
Dual Cashout Independence The two bet panels in Aviator operate with completely independent cashout timing. Cashing out bet one does not affect bet two — they run on the same multiplier but respond only to their own cashout trigger.
05
Auto-Cashout Precision Set your auto-cashout to any multiplier value, including decimals like 1.5× or 3.2×. The system executes it exactly when the live curve crosses that point, which removes hesitation from your cashout decision.
06
Chat Feed During the Round The in-round chat shows what others are doing in real time — when they cash out and at what multiplier. It does not affect your round, but it adds a social layer that single-player formats cannot replicate.

Aviator Questions We Hear Most Often

A multiplier starts at 1× when the round opens and climbs upward in real time. You press cashout at any point to lock in that value multiplied by your stake. If the round ends before you cashout, the bet does not return.

Yes. Aviator has two independent bet panels. You set a different stake on each and can cashout each one at a different multiplier point. Both panels share the same live multiplier but respond to their own cashout action.

Aviator uses a persistent session protocol. If your connection drops while a bet is active, the auto-cashout rule triggers at your pre-set value. If no auto-cashout was set, the round resolves and the result is saved to your history.

After each round a cryptographic hash is displayed in your round history. Copy that hash into Spribe's public verifier tool to confirm the multiplier was generated before your bet was placed and was not changed during the flight.

Aviator loads in any modern mobile browser on Android or iOS without a separate download. The interface adapts to portrait mode with the cashout button centralised and the dual-bet panel stacked below the multiplier graph.

Spribe publishes a 97% RTP for Aviator, certified by an independent testing laboratory. This figure reflects the long-run return distribution across all round multipliers and is consistent with the version hosted on angkasa 338.

Slots use reels, paylines and symbol combinations that resolve automatically. Aviator has no reels — a multiplier climbs and you decide when to exit. Your timing is the active variable, which is a fundamentally different format.