Last updated: 11-07-2026
Aviator has a detail most Australian reviews skip entirely: every single bet is capped at a A$10,000 payout, no matter how high the multiplier climbs. Bet A$100 and the plane crashes at 1,000x — on paper that's A$100,000, but the payout stops at A$10,000. I tested this at Richard Casino across both standard and double-bet modes, and it changes how you should size a punt from the first spin. There's also a wave of fake Aviator clones online using near-identical branding, a tournament system most players never activate, and a wagering contribution rule that catches out anyone trying to clear a bonus through this game specifically. Here's what actually matters before you load it up.
What is Aviator and how does it work at Richard Casino?
Aviator is a crash game by Spribe, not a traditional pokie — there's no reel, no paylines, no paytable in the usual sense. A plane takes off and a multiplier climbs from 1.00x upward in real time, ticking up as long as the plane stays airborne. You cash out whenever you choose; wait too long and the plane flies off screen, taking your stake with it. There's no way to predict the crash point in advance — each round is generated independently, which is exactly what the provably fair system further down this page is built to verify.
RTP sits at 97%, which is high for this genre and well above what most pokies return, but that figure means little on its own without understanding the cap and cashout mechanic underneath it. A 97% RTP describes the long-run average across thousands of rounds — it says nothing about any single bet, and in a game built entirely around instant decisions, that distinction matters more than usual.
Richard Casino runs the official Spribe build, which matters more than it sounds — there are numerous fake Aviator clones circulating under near-identical branding and near-identical plane graphics. If you've searched for this game before, you've likely landed on at least one imitation somewhere in the results. Confirm you're on Richard Casino's own game window, loaded through your account, before depositing toward it specifically. The genuine Spribe version will always show a verification or fairness icon somewhere in the game interface.
Minimum bet runs from around A$0.10, with a maximum single bet near A$100. A double-bet feature — worth understanding properly rather than treating as a footnote — lets you run two simultaneous wagers, up to roughly A$200 combined, each with its own independent auto-cashout target. Set one bet to clear early at 1.5x and let the second ride toward a higher multiplier, and you've got a basic hedge: one bet locks in a small guaranteed return, the other chases the bigger number. Most competitor pages mention double betting exists without explaining why it's useful.
| Parameter | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Provider | Spribe | Verify official branding — clones exist |
| RTP | 97% | Certified by iTech Labs and eCOGRA |
| Min bet | A$0.10 | Some sources list A$0.01 minimum — confirm in-game |
| Max bet | A$100 | Per single bet slot |
| Double bet total | A$200 | Two simultaneous bets, separate auto-cashout |
| Max win per bet | A$10,000 | Capped regardless of multiplier reached [fallback data] |
| Bonus wagering contribution | 0–10% | Typical for crash games — confirm before relying on bonus funds |
Author's tip from Ethan Wallace, Online Casino Analyst & Compliance Researcher: "Before you bet big on Aviator, check the max win cap in the game rules first — I've seen players plan a A$500 punt around a 50x target expecting A$25,000, only to find the payout stops at A$10,000 regardless."
Auto-cashout, Aviarace and the Rain Promo — features worth knowing
Auto-cashout lets you set a target multiplier in advance so the game cashes you out automatically the moment it's reached, without you needing to click at the right instant. That's genuinely useful for consistency — it removes the reaction-time element entirely. But it isn't foolproof. Server lag on a busy connection, or a manual override at the wrong moment, can still cost a bet that should have cleared cleanly. Treat auto-cashout as a discipline tool that removes hesitation, not a guarantee that every set target actually pays out.
Richard Casino also runs Aviarace, a leaderboard tournament tied directly to Aviator play. Points accumulate from qualifying bets and typically reward either total multiplier reached or total wagered volume, depending on how the current tournament is structured — but low-stake punts don't always count toward ranking. If you're playing small stakes purely to test the game, don't assume every spin is contributing to your leaderboard position; check the minimum qualifying bet before you start tracking your own progress.
Separately, the Rain Promo drops time-limited free bets through the game's live chat — a Spribe-wide feature, not unique to Richard Casino, but one that's easy to miss if you're not watching chat while you play. The window to claim is short, often just a couple of minutes, and the offer expires unclaimed if you're not paying attention. Neither Aviarace nor the Rain Promo is prominently explained in-app; it's worth checking the promotions page directly rather than assuming you're automatically enrolled in either.
Author's tip from Ethan Wallace, Online Casino Analyst & Compliance Researcher: "If a bonus is involved, don't assume Aviator counts toward wagering the way a pokie does — crash games typically contribute 0–10% at most operators, so check the terms before you build a clearing strategy around this game."
Is Aviator provably fair, and can you trust the outcome?
Aviator uses provably fair technology — a cryptographic hash combining a server seed and a client seed determines each round's crash point before the round even starts, and the result can be independently verified afterwards by anyone who wants to check it. That verification tool typically sits inside the game's settings or history panel; look for a "provably fair" or "fairness" link rather than taking the outcome on faith. In practice, this means the crash point for any given round was mathematically fixed before you placed your bet — the game isn't adjusting outcomes based on how much is currently staked.
RTP is independently certified by iTech Labs and eCOGRA, which is a stronger trust signal than most crash games carry, and one worth checking for on any Aviator clone before you trust it with real money. The record multiplier logged across certified Aviator instances runs into the tens of thousands — a reminder that the ceiling is theoretically enormous, even though your actual payout at Richard Casino stops at A$10,000 regardless of how high the number climbs.
Author's tip from Ethan Wallace, Online Casino Analyst & Compliance Researcher: "Run the provably fair check on a handful of past rounds before you deposit — it takes under a minute, and it's the fastest way to confirm you're on Spribe's genuine build rather than one of the clone sites using the same branding."
Play within a budget set before you start, and treat the double-bet feature as a way to manage risk rather than double your exposure. You must be 18+ to register at Richard Casino, which operates under a Curaçao licence rather than an Australian one — it sits outside ACMA and BetStop oversight, so play on offshore terms and keep that in mind for any dispute resolution.
A rough bankroll guide worth applying: because the multiplier can crash at any point from 1.00x onward, a run of consecutive early crashes is entirely normal, not a sign anything's wrong with the round generation. Sizing individual bets at 1–2% of your session bankroll gives you enough attempts to ride out a cold stretch without being forced out of the game by variance alone. Chasing losses by increasing bet size after a string of early crashes is the single fastest way to burn through a bankroll in a fast-paced game like this one, where a new round starts every few seconds.
Aviator rewards a clear head more than a strategy — set your cashout target before the plane takes off, not while it's climbing. If crash mechanics aren't quite your speed, the homepage covers the wider game library, or check the glossary for terms like RTP and provably fair explained in full. Already registered? Log in and try the demo before committing real funds.

