GAME REFERENCE

Aviator at tuankuda — One Round, One Decision

Aviator is the round-based crash game where a red plane climbs and your multiplier climbs with it — until you tap cash out. We host Spribe's original build...

Crash formatDual-bet slotsAuto cash-outLive chat roundSpribe original
tuankuda Aviator at tuankuda — One Round, One Decision
tuankuda What Aviator Is and Who Built It

What Aviator Is and Who Built It

Aviator comes from Spribe, the studio that shaped the crash genre in modern lobbies. The rules are short: place a stake before take-off, watch the multiplier rise, and cash out before the plane flies away. Each round uses a provably fair seed pair, so the outcome isn't decided by the room. We've put it inside the tuankuda lobby alongside slots and live

tables, ready on phone or desktop the moment you sign in.

EDITORIAL SPOTLIGHT

Three Things That Make Aviator Different

Updated today
tuankuda Two Stakes Per Round
Dual Bet

Two Stakes Per Round

You can run two independent bets in the same round — one for an early safe cash-out, one chasing a higher multiplier. The panel sits side by side so adjustments stay quick between flights.

tuankuda Auto Cash-Out Rule
Auto

Auto Cash-Out Rule

Set a target multiplier and Aviator cashes you out the second the curve hits it. Useful when you want a steady ladder of small exits instead of watching every round in full focus.

tuankuda Live Round Chat
Social

Live Round Chat

A side panel shows other people's stakes, recent multipliers and a chat stream. You see who held on, who exited at 1.4x, and the round history scrolls in real time as flights resolve.

tuankuda is designed as a fast, mobile-first gaming information hub with clear local payment context and safer access notes.

— tuankuda platform team

How An Aviator Round Plays Out

Entering the Round

Open Aviator from the lobby, pick your stake in the bet panel, and confirm before the plane lifts off. Bets locked after take-off roll into the next flight automatically with no extra tap.

The Climb

Once airborne, a single multiplier ticks upward from 1.00x. The curve speed varies each round — sometimes the plane drifts, sometimes it shoots — and that uncertainty is the whole game in a sentence.

Cashing Out

Tap the green cash-out button at any point and your stake multiplies by the live figure. Wait too long and the plane disappears, the round ends, and the stake is gone for that flight.

Mobile Feel

On your phone the bet panel sits thumb-height under the curve, so cashing out is a single tap. Portrait mode keeps the multiplier huge and the round history scrollable on one screen.

SIDE BY SIDE

Aviator Game Transparency

01

Game Type

Crash / instant round game by Spribe, single multiplier curve format with provably fair seed verification per round.

02

Volatility

High volatility — short rounds with wide outcome spread, multipliers regularly land below 2x but occasional flights run far higher.

03

Supported Devices

Browser play on Android and iOS phones, tablets and desktop. No separate download — Aviator loads inside the tuankuda lobby.

04

Access Region

Available to Indonesia accounts where local law permits, with the same lobby session covering supported regions.

MOBILE READY

Aviator on Your Phone

Aviator was built portrait-first and it shows. Open the round on your phone and the curve fills the upper half of the screen, the bet panel sits exactly where your...

One-tap cash out
Portrait curve view
Light data load
Background sound toggle
tuankuda mobile gaming
24/7 SUPPORT

Help While You're Flying Aviator

Round Disputes If a round resolved oddly on your end...
Connection Drops Lost signal mid-flight? Auto cash-out keeps running on...
Bet Panel Help New to dual-bet or auto rules? Live chat...
TRUST MARKERS

Why Aviator Rounds Stay Fair

Spribe Original

We host the genuine Aviator build straight from Spribe — not a clone or reskin — so the maths and curve behaviour match the version certified across regulated markets.

Provably Fair

Every round uses a seed-pair hash you can verify after the flight. The outcome is set before the plane lifts off, not adjusted while it climbs.

Round History

The last several hundred multipliers stay visible in the side panel. Nothing is hidden — you see the streaks, the busts and everything in between.

Independent Audit

Spribe's RNG and crash logic carry third-party lab certification, and that certification follows the game into our lobby unchanged.

Server-Side Resolution

Cash-outs resolve on Spribe's servers, not the client, so a laggy phone can't change what the round paid you.

Stake Visibility

Your stake, multiplier and outcome are written to the round log instantly, viewable from your account history any time after the flight ends.

Aviator Versus Other Games in Our Lobby

Aviator vs Sweet BonanzaSweet Bonanza is a tumbling slot with feature spins; Aviator is one curve, one decision. Pick Aviator when you want short rounds, pick Bonanza for longer sessions.
Aviator vs Live BaccaratBaccarat runs on a dealer's pace with set table rules. Aviator runs on your tap — you decide when the round ends for you, not the dealer.
Aviator vs RouletteRoulette gives you many bet positions per spin. Aviator gives you two bets max but a multiplier with no upper cap, which changes how you size stakes.
Aviator vs PlinkoBoth are quick-round Spribe-style games. Plinko resolves in one drop with fixed multiplier slots; Aviator resolves on your timing instead of physics.
Aviator vs Crazy TimeCrazy Time is a hosted live wheel with bonus rooms. Aviator has no host, no wheel — just you, the curve and the cash-out button.
Aviator vs MinesMines lets you build a multiplier tile by tile at your own pace. Aviator forces a time pressure — the plane decides when patience runs out.
Aviator vs Dragon TigerDragon Tiger is a two-card live coin flip. Aviator is the same gut-decision energy stretched across a rising curve instead of one card reveal.
SERVICE CONTEXT

Six Things to Know About Aviator

01
1.00x Start Every round opens at 1.00x. Cashing out at 1.00x returns your stake. The lowest meaningful exit is 1.01x and above.
02
No Round Cap There is no fixed ceiling on the multiplier. Rare flights have run past 100x — most resolve far lower, which is the whole tension.
03
Two-Bet Slots You always have two stake slots available, side by side. Run them at different sizes or different auto targets in the same flight.
04
Round Length Most flights resolve inside ten to twenty seconds. Aviator suits short windows — between live-table hands or while a slot autospins.
05
Stake Range Stake limits are set in the bet panel and visible before lock-in. The range covers small exploratory bets through to higher-stake flights.
06
History Panel Past multipliers stream down the side of the screen. Useful for pacing yourself — not predictive, since each round is independent.

Aviator Questions We Hear Often

Aviator isn't a slot. It's a crash-format round game by Spribe — one rising multiplier curve per round, and your only decision is when to cash out before the plane flies off the screen.

Yes. The bet panel shows two independent stake slots side by side. You can size them differently and cash each out at its own moment, or set separate auto-cash-out targets for both.

Set a target multiplier in the auto field before the round starts. The moment the curve touches that figure, your stake exits automatically — useful when you want consistent small ladder exits.

The round resolves on Spribe's server, not your device. If you had auto cash-out set, it still triggers. Without auto, a disconnect mid-flight means the round runs to its server outcome.

Each round publishes a hashed seed pair before take-off, viewable after the flight. You can verify the outcome was set before the curve started climbing — the room can't adjust it during play.

It's built portrait-first, so even on compact screens the curve dominates the upper half and the cash-out button stays thumb-sized. Data load is light enough for commuter signal in Indonesia.

Yes — the side panel streams recent round results. Treat it as pacing context rather than prediction, since every Aviator round is independent and previous multipliers don't influence the next one.