Aviator: How the Game Works, and the Truth About "Predictors"
Aviator by Spribe is the most-played casual betting game in South Africa. A plane takes off, a multiplier climbs, and you have to cash out before it flies away. It's simple and fast, and it's also surrounded by more scams than any other game on this site. Here's the game, without the nonsense attached to it.
Last updated: July 2026
How Aviator Works
- Place a bet before the round starts (you can place two bets per round).
- The plane takes off and the multiplier climbs from 1.00x upward.
- Tap Cash Out at any moment to lock in your bet × the current multiplier.
- If the plane flies away before you cash out, the bet is lost. The crash point is decided randomly before the round, and can be as low as 1.00x (instant crash).
Rounds last seconds, which is exactly why budgets disappear so quickly. Set your limits before you open the app, not during a round.
The Maths You Should Know
- RTP sits around 97%, slightly better than most slots, though the house edge never actually disappears.
- Provably fair: each crash point comes from a combination of server and player seeds, published so you can verify rounds afterwards. That proves the operator didn't rig the round. It does not mean rounds can be predicted.
- Every round is independent. Five low crashes in a row tell you nothing about the next one.
"Aviator Predictor" Apps: All of Them Are Scams
There is no working Aviator predictor. The crash point comes from cryptographic randomness that includes a server seed no app can see. Every "predictor" circulating on Telegram, YouTube or APK sites falls into one of three categories:
- Paid app scam: you pay R200 to R500 for an app that just shows random numbers.
- "Activation" scam: the app is free, but it demands you register at a specific, often unlicensed, site through their link and deposit there. The seller earns affiliate commission on whatever you lose.
- Malware: APK "predictor mods" that steal banking and betting logins straight off your phone.
If prediction actually worked, the seller would be getting quietly rich off it, not selling access for R300.
Cash-Out Approaches (Honest Version)
No strategy beats the edge, but these are the common ways people manage the swings:
| Approach | How | Reality |
|---|---|---|
| Early cash-out | Auto cash-out at 1.2x–1.5x | Frequent small wins, but 1.00x–1.19x crashes still wipe streaks |
| Two-bet split | One bet cashes early to cover both stakes, second rides higher | Feels safer; the combined edge is unchanged |
| High-multiplier hunting | Wait for 10x+ | Rare hits, long losing runs, needs a strict stop-loss |
Where to Play Aviator Legally in SA
- Hollywoodbets. Aviator plus the R25 sign-up credit to try it without depositing anything.
- Betway. Aviator inside the cleanest app of the two, a good fit if you also bet sports.
Both are provincially licensed. Steer clear of offshore "Aviator sites" pushed by predictor sellers. Without an SA licence, there's no recourse when a withdrawal simply never arrives.
FAQ
Is Aviator legal in South Africa?
It is, when played at a licensed bookmaker like Hollywoodbets or Betway, where it's offered under their provincial betting licences.
Do Aviator predictors work?
They don't. Crash points are generated with a hidden server seed before each round, and no app can see or compute it. Predictor apps are, without exception, paid junk, affiliate bait for unlicensed sites, or malware.
What is the best time to play Aviator?
There isn't one. Rounds run independent and random around the clock, so "hot hours" claims are just another predictor-scam myth.
What's the minimum bet?
Typically R1 per bet at SA bookmakers, which means the R25 Hollywoodbets sign-up credit covers plenty of rounds.