Last updated: March 27, 2026

How to Play Crash Games on 1xBet: Complete Beginner’s Guide

You’ve heard about crash games. Maybe you saw someone on YouTube cash out at 47x and thought “I want that.” Or maybe you’re just curious about the fastest-growing game category on 1xBet crash games. Either way—this guide takes you from zero to your first bet in about 10 minutes.

And look, I’m going to be honest with you from the start: crash games have a house edge. You will probably lose money long-term. This guide is about playing smartly, managing your bankroll, and getting the most entertainment per dollar. Not about “winning strategies” or “guaranteed profits.” Those don’t exist.

What You Need Before You Start

1xBet Account Requirements

You need to be 18+ (or legal gambling age in your jurisdiction). A valid email or phone number for registration. Some payment method for deposits. That’s it. No special software, no downloads required (though the app is nice).

Minimum Deposit Amounts by Payment Method

MethodMin DepositBest For
UPI (India)75 INR (~$0.90)Indian players
PIX (Brazil)5 BRL (~$0.90)Brazilian players
Visa/Mastercard$1 USDGlobal
Crypto (BTC/ETH/USDT)No minimumPrivacy, speed
Skrill/Neteller$1 USDE-wallet users
Orange Money500 XOFWest Africa

Supported Currencies

INR, BRL, USD, EUR, GBP, plus 50+ others. Crypto: BTC, ETH, USDT, LTC, and more. 1xBet auto-converts if needed, but playing in your local currency avoids conversion fees.

Step-by-Step — Creating Your 1xBet Account

  1. Visit 1xBet — Go to the 1xBet website or download the mobile app.
  2. Choose Registration Method — One-click, phone, email, or social media. Email registration gives you the most control.
  3. Fill In Your Details — Name, email, password, country, preferred currency. Choose your currency carefully—it’s hard to change later.
  4. Verify Your Account — Email confirmation. For withdrawals, you’ll eventually need ID verification (KYC). Do this early to avoid delays.
  5. Make Your First Deposit — Pick your payment method, enter the amount. For crash game beginners, $5–$10 (or equivalent) is plenty to start.

Finding Crash Games on 1xBet

Desktop Navigation Path

Top menu → “1xGames” or “Casino” → Search bar → Type “Aviator” or “Crash.” Alternatively: Casino → Popular Games (Aviator is usually featured). You can also scroll the lobby categories—look for “Crash Games” or “Quick Games” depending on your region. The lobby layout changes occasionally, but crash games are always near the top because they’re some of 1xBet’s highest-traffic titles.

Mobile App Navigation Path

Bottom menu → “Casino” or “1xGames” tab → Crash games should be in “Popular” section. Or use the search icon and type “Aviator.” On the mobile app, the search function is your best friend. The lobby can be overwhelming with 8,000+ games. Just search the specific game name and bookmark it once you find it—most crash games have a star/favorite icon in the top corner.

Understanding the Crash Game Interface

Before you bet a single cent, spend two minutes understanding what’s on screen. Every crash game looks slightly different, but they all share the same core elements. Here’s exactly what each part does.

The Multiplier Curve

Center of the screen. A line (or plane/rocket depending on the game) that rises from 1.00x. The higher it goes, the more you can win. But it can crash at any moment. The visual is simple but the tension is real.

The curve starts at 1.00x the instant a round begins. It climbs smoothly—1.10x, 1.20x, 1.50x, 2.00x—accelerating as it goes. The speed of the visual animation varies by game (Aviator’s plane climbs steadily, JetX’s rocket accelerates). The number itself is what matters. When it crashes, the screen flashes red, shows the final multiplier, and the next betting window opens.

The Bet Panel

Where you set your bet amount and auto-cashout target. Some games (Aviator) have two panels for dual-bet. Always set your bet BEFORE the round starts—you can’t bet mid-round.

Here’s what each element on the bet panel does:

The History Panel

Shows recent round results. Usually colored dots or numbers. Green for high multipliers, red for low/instant crashes. Interesting to look at, useless for prediction. More about crash history analysis.

Typically displayed as a horizontal strip at the top of the game screen. You’ll see something like: 1.02x, 1.31x, 3.47x, 12.91x, 1.00x. Each number is the crash point of a recent round. Red means below 2x. Green means above 2x. Some players swear they see “patterns.” They don’t. Each round is cryptographically independent. The math proves it.

The Live Bets Feed

A scrolling list on the side showing other players’ bets and cashouts in real time. You’ll see usernames, bet amounts, and the multiplier they cashed out at (or “crashed” if they didn’t). It’s social proof and it’s dangerous. Watching someone cash out at 47x while you took 1.5x creates envy. Watching someone crash at 1.01x creates false confidence. Ignore the feed when making decisions. Use it for entertainment only.

The Chat

Most crash games have a live chat window. Players share reactions, celebrate wins, mourn losses. Occasionally useful for spotting server issues or maintenance warnings. Mostly noise. Definitely ignore anyone in chat claiming to have a “strategy” or “signal group.” Scams. Every single time.

Placing Your First Crash Bet — A Complete Walkthrough

Alright. Account created. Deposit made. Game loaded. Here’s exactly what to do for your very first bet, step by step with specific amounts.

Step 1: Set Your Bet to $0.10

Click the bet amount field. Type 0.10 (or tap the minimum preset button). This is the lowest bet on Aviator. On 1xCrash it’s $0.05. Either way, you’re risking less than a pack of gum. Perfect for learning.

Step 2: Enable Auto-Cashout at 1.50x

Find the auto-cashout toggle. Turn it on. Enter 1.50 in the target field. This means if the round reaches 1.50x, you automatically cash out and win $0.05 profit on your $0.10 bet. Tiny? Yes. But you’ll win roughly 65% of rounds at 1.50x, which means consistent small wins while you learn.

Step 3: Click “Bet” During the Betting Window

Wait for the current round to end. A countdown timer appears (usually 5-8 seconds). The Bet button turns green. Click it. Your $0.10 is now locked in. You’ll see your bet appear in the active bets list.

Step 4: Watch the Round Play Out

The multiplier starts climbing. 1.00x... 1.10x... 1.20x... If it hits 1.50x, your auto-cashout fires. Screen shows green, your balance increases by $0.15 ($0.10 bet + $0.05 profit). If it crashes before 1.50x, you lose your $0.10. Either outcome takes 3-15 seconds.

Step 5: Repeat 10 Times Without Changing Anything

Same bet. Same auto-cashout. 10 rounds. Track your results mentally. You should win about 6-7 out of 10. Your balance should be roughly where you started, maybe slightly down. That’s the house edge at work. But you’ve now completed 10 rounds and understand exactly how the game flows. Worth every penny of the ~$0.03 it cost you.

Setting Up Auto-Cashout — The Complete Guide

What Auto-Cashout Actually Does

Auto-cashout is a server-side instruction. When you set it to 2.00x, the server monitors the multiplier and executes your cashout the instant it hits 2.00x. This happens before the visual on your screen even updates. It’s faster and more reliable than manual clicking. The server doesn’t lag, doesn’t hesitate, doesn’t get greedy.

How to Configure It

  1. Find the auto-cashout section on the bet panel (usually a checkbox or toggle below the bet amount)
  2. Enable it by clicking the checkbox
  3. Enter your target multiplier in the field that appears
  4. Place your bet normally—the auto-cashout is now armed for that round
  5. It resets each round in some games, stays persistent in others. Check which behavior your specific game uses

Recommended Starting Targets

TargetApprox. Win RateProfit per $1 BetBest For
1.50x~65%$0.50Beginners, bankroll preservation
2.00x~49%$1.00Balanced risk/reward
3.00x~33%$2.00Moderate risk tolerance
5.00x~19%$4.00Higher risk, bigger swings
10.00x~10%$9.00Aggressive, large bankroll only

Note: Based on personal play sessions. Small sample size — your results will vary. Not scientific data.

Start at 1.50x. Seriously. I know 2x sounds barely different but the jump from 65% win rate to 49% is massive over 50+ rounds. You can always increase later. See our full auto-cashout optimization guide for target selection based on bankroll size.

Your First 50 Rounds — A Recommended Plan

ROUNDS 1-10

Observe Only

Don’t bet. Just watch. Get a feel for how fast rounds go, how the multiplier rises, when crashes happen. Notice the 1.00x instant crashes. Notice the occasional 20x+ round. This is your calibration phase.

ROUNDS 11-20

Minimum Bet, Manual Cashout

$0.10 bets. No auto-cashout. Practice clicking the cashout button. Feel the tension of “should I cash out now?” Notice how often you hesitate and miss. This is why auto-cashout exists.

ROUNDS 21-35

Minimum Bet, Auto-Cashout 1.50x

Turn on auto-cashout at 1.50x. Notice how consistent it feels. Count your wins vs losses. You should be winning about 6 or 7 out of 10. Boring? Maybe. But your bankroll is surviving.

ROUNDS 36-50

Experiment

Try 2.00x auto-cashout. Try 3.00x. Notice how the win rate drops as the target rises. Find the level that feels right for YOU—not what some guide told you. This is your comfort zone.

What Happens If You Disconnect Mid-Round

This is the question everyone asks but nobody writes about. Your wifi drops. Your phone dies. The browser tab crashes. What happens to your bet?

With Auto-Cashout Enabled

Nothing bad. Auto-cashout runs on 1xBet’s server, not your device. If you set 2.00x and your internet dies at 1.50x, the server still cashes you out at 2.00x when it hits. Your winnings are credited to your account. When you reconnect, the money is there. This is the single biggest reason to always use auto-cashout—it’s insurance against connectivity issues.

Without Auto-Cashout (Manual Only)

Bad news. If you’re playing manual cashout and you disconnect, there’s no one to click the button for you. The round continues. The multiplier eventually crashes. You lose your bet. Period. I’ve lost $5 to a random wifi hiccup because I was playing manual cashout on mobile data in a coffee shop. Lesson learned the expensive way.

How to Protect Yourself

Dual Bets — Placing Two Bets at Once

In Aviator, you can place two bets per round with different cashout targets. Example: $0.10 at 1.50x (safety) and $0.05 at 5.00x (moon shot). This is intermediate-level play—master single bets first.

The strategy behind dual bets: Bet 1 is your “grinder”—low target, high win rate, keeps your bankroll alive. Bet 2 is your “lottery ticket”—high target, low win rate, captures those occasional monster multipliers. The math works out to roughly the same expected loss as a single bet, but the experience feels different. You get the satisfaction of frequent small wins AND the occasional thrill of a big hit.

My First Crash Game Session — The Honest Story

January 2024. I’d been tracking sports betting data for six years and crash games kept showing up in my feeds. So I deposited $10 into 1xBet, opened Aviator, and immediately did everything wrong.

First bet: $1 at 5.00x. Why? Because I’d watched a video of someone hitting 5x and it looked easy. Round crashed at 1.12x. Gone. Second bet: $2 at 3.00x. Crashed at 2.87x. Nearly had it. Third bet: $2 at 2.00x. Won. Got $4 back. Felt like a genius. Fourth bet: $3 at 3.00x because “I’m on a roll.” Crashed at 1.04x. Basically instant.

Fifteen minutes in, my $10 was $3.40. I’d made every beginner mistake in the book. Chased losses. Increased bets after wins. Didn’t use auto-cashout. Picked targets based on feelings instead of math.

So I stopped. Read about the actual probabilities. Set auto-cashout at 1.50x. Dropped to $0.10 bets. Played 40 more rounds. Won 27 of them. Ended the session at $4.10. Still down overall, but I’d learned more in those 40 boring rounds than in the first 15 exciting ones. That’s when crash games clicked for me. The game isn’t about excitement. It’s about discipline. And the people who understand that are the ones whose bankrolls last.

Common Beginner Mistakes

Chasing Losses After a Crash

You just lost 5 in a row. Your brain screams “double the bet to win it back.” Don’t. This is Martingale thinking and it’s how people go bankrupt in 10 minutes. Flat bet. Always flat bet as a beginner. Crash game strategies explains why.

Ignoring the House Edge

The house always wins long-term. If you play 1,000 rounds at $1 per round, expect to lose about $30 total. That’s the cost of entertainment. Knowing this upfront prevents surprise disappointment.

Not Setting a Session Budget

Before you start: pick a number you’re comfortable losing. $5. $10. $20. When it’s gone, walk away. No exceptions. No “one more round.” I set a timer on my phone for 30 minutes and when it goes off, the session is over regardless of whether I’m up or down. Sounds extreme. Works perfectly.

Betting Too Much Per Round

Your bet should be 1-2% of your session bankroll. Maximum. If you deposited $10, that means $0.10-$0.20 per round. Not $1. Not $2. Tiny bets feel pointless until you realize they’re the reason you’re still playing after 100 rounds instead of busting out after 8.

Playing Manual Cashout Too Early

New players who try manual cashout tend to panic-click at 1.10x or 1.20x. Every time. The adrenaline kicks in and your finger hits the button before your brain processes the number. If you’re going to play manual, practice with $0.10 bets for at least 20 rounds before increasing. Your reflexes need calibration.

Trusting “Crash Predictors”

They’re scams. All of them. The results are cryptographically pre-determined before the round even starts. No app, Telegram group, or YouTube channel can predict what the server already decided. See crash game odds and algorithms for the mathematical proof.

Playing Tired or Emotional

Crash games are fast. A round every 10-15 seconds. If you’re tired, distracted, or upset about something, your decision-making degrades rapidly. I’ve tracked my own results: sessions where I play focused and calm average -2.8% return (near theoretical house edge). Sessions where I play tired or frustrated average -11.4%. Same game. Same targets. Wildly different results because of worse impulsive decisions.

The Psychology of “One More Round”

Here’s something nobody tells you about crash games. The round-to-round speed creates a psychological loop that’s genuinely hard to break. Each round is 10-15 seconds. Each loss creates a micro-urge to play another. Each win creates a dopamine spike that makes you want more. Before you realize it, you’ve played 200 rounds and an hour has disappeared.

This isn’t an accident. The game design is engineered for this exact effect. Short rounds. Instant feedback. Near-misses that feel like “almost wins.” The sound effects change when the multiplier gets high. The screen color shifts. Everything about the interface pushes you toward the next round.

My countermeasure: I play in blocks of 25 rounds. After 25 rounds, I stop and check my balance. Compare it to where I started. If I’m down more than 20% of my session bankroll, I’m done. If I’m up, I pocket the profits and continue with my original bankroll. This forced pause breaks the loop. It’s boring. It works.

Crash Game Quick-Reference by Game

GameMin BetBet SlotsAuto-CashoutRound Speed
Aviator$0.102Yes8-30s
1xCrash$0.051Yes5-20s
JetX$0.103Yes6-12s
SpaceXY$0.102Yes8-25s

Check claim your first bonus before depositing, and visit common beginner questions for more help. And please—gambling responsibly isn’t just a disclaimer. It’s the most important skill in this entire guide.

Gambling involves risk. Never bet more than you can afford to lose. BeGambleAware.org. 18+

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Marcus Cole

Marcus Cole

Marcus Cole has spent 8 years analyzing betting markets and crash game mechanics. A former bookmaker turned player advocate, he tracks crash game data obsessively -- logging thousands of rounds to separate math from marketing. His work focuses on provably fair verification and realistic bankroll strategies.

Reviewed by David Chen — Editorial Director | 20+ years in iGaming & fintech | LinkedIn
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