How to Play Aviamasters -
BGaming Game Guide
From setting your USD bet to launching the plane, watching the Counter Balance shift with multipliers and rockets, and understanding safe landings before you fly for real money.
// Contents
// What You Need to Begin
Aviamasters feels leaner than a typical slot, but you still need to scan the display in the right sequence. There are no reels, no paylines, and no buy-a-bonus panel. You place your wager, press Spin, and the plane flies on a randomly chosen route toward a safe touchdown or a crash.
The round’s current value appears on the Counter Balance that floats over the plane. That value grows when the plane captures flat-value or multiplier tokens, and it can drop fast when rockets trigger. The point here isn’t to predict anything — it’s to know what the interface is telling you in real time.
Treat this guide as a map rather than a formula. It walks you through the bet field, the spin button, the symbols, the rockets, the speed options, the autoplay features, the history tables, mobile access, and how to try demo mode before wagering real money.
// Before You Start: Read This First
The big section on the Aviamasters board is the flight path. That is where the plane gets going, encounters tokens, gains or loses altitude, and ultimately either lands on the carrier or misses the safe landing. That part of the animation tells you exactly why the Counter Balance has changed.
The lower part of the board is for your actions: you input your stake, begin the round, adjust the speed, and turn on autoplay. Smaller controls for history, instructions, and configuration usually sit around the edges of the game box. They are helpful, sure, but there is no need to click them before every single spin.
Read the flight path first, then the command panel. If things feel busy, slow the speed down and track just three items: the plane, the Counter Balance, and whichever symbol the plane will touch next.
The aircraft animation and the flight path set the mood, but your interaction with the game is much more straightforward. Before launching, you pick the stake amount, then the round plays out on its own. Get your head around the flight path and the command panel before you get wrapped up in the visuals.
// Your Bet
Decide your stake before each manual round. In USD-based casinos, the figure you enter in the bet field is how much the spin costs you. Minimums and maximums can differ among casinos, so consult the casino panel instead of assuming there’s one universal stake range.
The stake is also the launch value for the Counter Balance. If you bet $1.00, then your round starts at $1.00. Later, when the craft encounters +5, x3, or a rocket, it’s modifying that same Counter Balance — not filling up a separate bar.
Lower stakes help when you’re still learning; they buy you more time to observe. Putting big money down means each crash feels personal, and that’s exactly the wrong mindset for a game about random paths. Pick a wager on a starter or demo run that lets you play a good handful of rounds — the goal here is observing the Counter, not testing a betting system.
Keep the first stake small. A lower bet won’t help your odds, but it buys you more rounds to learn how tokens add up, how multipliers scale the Counter, and how a single rocket can halve it before one flight decides the session.
// When You Spin: What Happens Next
When you tap Spin, the aircraft launches and your random path is already set in motion — you can’t manually guide it once the round begins. The outcome is dictated by which symbols and rockets the craft runs into, and whether it manages a successful landing. There are two possible ways the round can end.
❌
Crash / Missed Landing
The aircraft does not make the landing. Your wager is forfeited, regardless of how promising the Counter Balance was when the failure occurred.
✅
Safe Landing
The aircraft makes it back to the carrier. The round succeeds, and your final Counter Balance becomes your round payout.
// Live Counter Balance: What It Really Is
New players will sometimes mistake that counter for a banked win. It is not. It represents what you will be credited only if the craft actually lands at the end of the round.
So a $2 wager that grows to $18 after a series of positive coins, then drops to $9 once it runs into a rocket, still does not make $9 money you can keep. It remains contingent on the flight ending with a landing. That’s why it matters to watch both the counter and the flight path: a higher number is fun, but the flight is still required for that balance to count.
While the plane is in the air, every coin that comes in changes the Counter Balance live: flat + coins simply add on top, × multiplier coins scale the balance up, and rockets chop the current counter in half. The value only pays out on a safe landing.
The Counter Balance is conditional. Do not re-imagine the round after it just crashed or after a major rocket. Your next Spin is separate, and your last counter will have no bearing on your craft’s chances in the round that follows.
// Understanding Your Multiplier Tokens
Aviamasters has a fairly streamlined coin system, and knowing exactly what each coin means can be the difference between winning and losing on your next round. Flat additions create the foundation, multipliers increase the value on the board, and rockets penalize the value you have at that moment. Timing is crucial — a +5 is worth far more after a few rounds of addition, and a rocket right after a multiplier can ruin your best effort before your eyes.
+1
Adds 1 to the Counter. Not much until your value gets very high.
+2
Adds 2 to the Counter, giving your future multipliers a better starting point.
+5
A great flat increase. It gives a dull round a chance to get exciting.
+10
The best flat increase in the game. Very valuable right before an x2, x3, x4, or x5.
x2 to x5
Multiplies the entire Counter by the value of the multiplier token.
🚀
Rocket
Reduces the value by half and sends the plane downwards. It is not a glitch — that is what a rocket does.
See how tokens work. Tokens are not individual but sequential: multipliers only matter if you have built a strong Counter for them to multiply, and rockets hurt more when the plane has been climbing. Start a demo, put in a very low virtual bet, and watch a few full flights without skipping the rounds before you play at a faster pace.
See how tokens and rockets play out in practice
The free Aviamasters demo runs the same math as real-money play. You can launch the plane, watch a handful of full flights, and see how flat coins, multipliers, and rockets move the Counter Balance before you deposit.
// Speeds
Aviamasters has four speeds. They do not change the result of your spins, but they definitely alter the learning process. Speeding through rounds makes them go by quickly, but it also makes the flow of symbols harder to follow. Choose a speed slower than you think you need; once you understand the effect of every token, increase it if it still works for you.
🐢
Tortoise (Speed 1)
The slowest speed available, recommended for initial demo sessions where you need to understand what each token is doing as it shows up.
🚶
Walking Man (Speed 2)
Takes the speed up a notch, but not fast enough to blur the symbols on screen. This is the recommended speed for manual play.
🐇
Rabbit (Speed 3)
A faster pace, recommended only for players who already understand the tokens and prefer to move more quickly.
⚡
Lightning (Speed 4)
As fast as you can play. It is good for learning the symbols quickly, but only play fast when you have clear goals and limits on when to end the session.
If you can’t remember the value of the final symbol in a round, the speed is too fast for you to follow what is going on. Don’t go higher until you can comfortably slow down and read each flight.
// How to Handle Autoplay Responsibly
Autoplay in Aviamasters lets you launch multiple rounds in a row based on predefined rules. While useful, it removes the break between spins, which increases the importance of setting solid stopping limits. Plan your round count and stop conditions before you enable Autoplay, and don’t use it to recover an emotional loss or chase a near-miss.
Stop conditions to choose from:
Number of Spins
Determines the total number of auto rounds permitted. Keep this low while you are still getting familiar with the game.
Win
Ends the auto sequence after a winning spin. Conservative and good for testing how the game behaves.
Balance increase by X
Ends once your overall balance has risen by the amount you specify. You can also set Win over X to stop when a single round reaches a target value.
Balance decrease by X
Ends once your balance has fallen by the amount of funds you specify. This is an important financial safeguard, so set it before you start.
Specify your stop-loss rule in the auto round settings before you start your first auto round. It is rarely helpful to set a stop-loss after a losing streak has already taken place — decide it when you’re thinking clearly.
Do not automatically resume Autoplay after the game stops. Take note of your account balance, session play time, and total budget before you restart. A stop rule is only effective when you actually observe it.
// Tailoring Your Settings
There is nothing magical about the interface that changes your odds, but it can help a lot when setting up your preferences for easier play. Aviamasters is a visual game, so it works best when you can observe the Counter, the flight path, and the controls easily and comfortably.
📍
Spin button position
Place the control where it’s easy to press and where it does not obstruct the flight of the plane.
🔊
Spin button size and translucence
Adjust the size and transparency of the button so the symbols stay visible and the layout is comfortable on smaller screens.
🔲
Music and sound FX volume
Use the sound effects to alert you to collision points; the music is your choice and shouldn’t interfere with your decisions.
⚡
Game speed during Spin
Adjust the pace of play for comfort. Slow down while you’re learning, then speed up once you know how the game works.
// How to Find the Game History and Rules
You’ll find this information in the side panels. The history shows the record of your rounds, and the rules explain the specifics of how each session, stoppage, or result is handled. Open both at least once before playing with real money.
📋
Game History
Shows all previous rounds, resolved bets, and how quickly you played. It’s better to check the record than to rely on memory.
📄
Game Rules
Explains how the Counter Balance, tokens, rockets, landings, and technical interruptions are handled by the game.
Check your history after a disruption. If you close your browser, drop your connection, or the animation freezes, don’t assume the round played out the way you expected. Reload the game and check your account balance and history for proof of what happened.
// Mobile Aviamasters
Aviamasters runs on your phone or tablet through all the legal gambling websites and official online casino apps for these casinos. The rules of the game don’t change on mobile; the small screen does, however, require careful attention to your layout and mobile data usage.
👆
Touch Controls
Your spin button and settings menu are easy to hit without covering the plane or the Counter Balance.
📱
Portrait or Landscape View
Choose the orientation that keeps the game elements in view and lets you see the flight path and bet clearly.
📶
Connection
Playing Aviamasters for real money should always happen on a strong internet connection. Avoid spotty wi-fi or flaky mobile data.
⚠️
No 3rd-party APKs
Aviamasters doesn’t require a third-party APK. Choose licensed casino sites or official casino apps, and don’t gamble at random websites that just copy the BGaming title.
// The Demo Version: What You Can and Can't Get
A demo is the easiest way to learn Aviamasters without putting real balance at risk. You can work through the bet field, the spin cycle, the order of tokens, the speed modes, and the autoplay function with fake credits.
✅
What demo mode offers
A safe space to learn take-offs, Counter Balance changes, rockets, safe landings, the different speeds, and the autoplay function.
❌
What you can't learn in demo
A demo cannot simulate real balance pressure, nor can it tell you when a token sequence will repeat once you bet real money. Treat it as a way to study the controls, not as a predictive tool.
Instead of running one long session, run many short demo sessions and keep them focused. You want to memorize how the flight and the Counter behave, not look for a pattern.
// What Can Happen in Your First Demo Round
Your demo round could go by pretty fast, even at the regular speed. You may see a good Counter Balance drop after a rocket, a small round land, or a great round end before the plane even takes off.
- Rounds might end very quickly, before the Counter Balance starts to grow.
- Staking very little can still see a big jump if the Counter adds +10 and a multiplier lands.
- A single rocket can make the Counter Balance drop significantly.
- Speed modes 3 and 4 look thrilling, but the rounds are difficult to follow at that pace.
- Running autoplay without stopping at your balance limit can use up money faster than manual spinning.
Take the game easy. There’s no need to play every time your Spin button is active. If you just ran a round and felt very frustrated or excited with the outcome, pause before the next one. That is how you should be playing.
// Common Mistakes You Can Make
Betting too much
When your first bet is too high and you hit a rocket, it puts stress on you. Lower your initial bet to learn the game first.
Failing to track the Counter Balance
The Counter Balance is still at risk until the plane lands. Don’t treat it like a win you already own.
Going full speed immediately
Fast mode is fine, but don’t use it if you aren’t sure why an outcome changed. Try the slower speed modes first.
Restarting autoplay immediately after stopping
If autoplay stopped because of a rule you set, take a look at the round before you start a new sequence.
Looking for the perfect landing
An unlucky round in the past does not make the plane any more likely to land next time.
Want to play for real money?
Test the waters first, and don't play at a real casino until your stake, your stop point, and your time commitment are already set. When you play for real, the game should feel like you thought about everything first, at a properly licensed casino.
// Quick Summary of Controls
Use this as a quick refresher after reading the full guide. If any control still feels unclear, return to demo mode before using real funds.
Bet field
Sets the amount of money you wish to spend on each round.
Spin button
Deploys the aircraft and starts the round.
Counter Balance
Shows your potential round amount while the plane is in the air. It only pays on a safe landing.
Speed mode
Alters the pace of how the plane and the round move, without changing the actual results.
Autoplay
Lets you run a series of rounds set up the way you wish.
Stop rules
End your autoplay on a big win, a set amount of profit, a balance loss, or a target value.
Game history
Retrieves previous rounds and what they ended as.
About page
Explains the settlement rules and how the game works.
Multiplier tokens
Flat +1, +2, +5, and +10 coins add to the Counter; x2 to x5 coins scale it up.
Rockets
Cut the current Counter Balance in half and send the plane downwards.
Safe landing
The plane reaches the carrier and your Counter Balance is paid out as the round win.
Developer and release
BGaming, a casual plane game released in July 2024 with a 97% RTP and a max multiplier of x250.
You Can Start Now
You now know how to change your bet, how the Counter Balance works, why the game has rockets, what the multipliers can mean, how fast the different speed modes play, and how to limit your autoplay. Try the demo version and wager small amounts, and only play for real money at licensed sites.
18+ | Play responsibly | Licensed platforms only
