Crash is huge on GCC-friendly sites. This guide explains how the multiplier rises and “crashes”, how to set Auto-Cashout, and which strategies fit your risk profile.
Reminder: online gambling is restricted in parts of the GCC. Follow local laws.
How Crash works (in 30 seconds)
The round starts at 1.00×. The multiplier climbs until it “crashes”. If you cash out before the crash, you win stake × multiplier. If you don’t — you lose the stake.
- Auto-Cashout: preset your exit (e.g., 1.50×) so you don’t have to click in time.
- Provably fair: crash points are computed from verifiable cryptographic seeds.
Strategies compared — pick your risk
Strategy | Auto-Cashout | Win Frequency | Risk | Who it fits |
---|---|---|---|---|
Low-risk baseline | 1.30×–1.60× | High | Low | New players; budget keepers |
Balanced | 1.70×–2.50× | Medium | Moderate | Regulars who accept swings |
High-risk shots | 3×–10×+ | Low | High | Chasing big hits only |
No strategy beats the house; these presets help you control volatility and session length.
Bankroll control & session planning (mobile)
- Define a daily budget and stop-loss (e.g., 3–5 losing rounds max).
- Lock your auto-cashout before each round; avoid changing targets mid-session.
- Take scheduled breaks; short sessions reduce tilt on mobile.
For deeper planning, try our RTP-based Strategy Tool.
FAQ
What’s the safest multiplier to use?
1.3×–1.6× is the common “safety” lane for long sessions — but variance still exists.
Can I predict when it will crash?
No. Results are provably fair and unpredictable. Focus on exits and limits.
Is Martingale good for Crash?
It magnifies risk. If you try it, cap progression strictly and pair with a low auto-cashout.