Example calculation at 1.20x target:
- Bet: $10 per round.
- Win: $12 (profit of $2 per successful round).
- Assuming the crash point exceeds 1.20x roughly 80% of the time (consistent with a ~97% RTP model and exponential distribution): over 100 rounds, approximately 80 wins ($160 profit) and 20 losses ($200 lost).
- Net result: approximately –$40 over 100 rounds.
The maths confirms it — even with a "safe" low multiplier, the house edge ensures a long-term negative expected value. The advantage of this approach is low volatility. Your balance declines slowly and predictably rather than in dramatic swings.
Moderate: Dual Betting Strategy (1.5x + 2.0x)
Place two simultaneous bets per round. Set auto cash-out on the first bet at 1.5x and on the second at 2.0x.
- If both succeed: total invested $20, total received $35. Net profit: $15.
- If only Bet 1 succeeds (crash between 1.5x and 2.0x): total invested $20, total received $15. Net loss: $5. The first bet partially covers the second.
- If both fail (crash below 1.5x): total invested $20, total received $0. Net loss: $20.
The dual-bet approach hedges by letting the conservative bet partially insure the aggressive one. It does not eliminate the house edge, but it reduces the variance of individual rounds and gives you more "partial wins" instead of binary outcomes.
Flat Staking (Fixed Bet Amount)
Wager exactly the same amount every round, regardless of wins or losses. Crash rounds cycle extremely fast — sometimes under 10 seconds. The temptation to increase stakes after a loss is intense. Flat staking removes that escalation by design. Set your per-bet amount at 1–2% of your total session bankroll. If your bankroll is $500, bet $5–$10 per round. This ensures you can sustain at least 50–100 rounds even in a losing streak.
Why the Martingale System Will Fail You
The Martingale strategy — doubling your bet after every loss — is seductive in theory. One win recovers all previous losses. In practice, it is a bankroll destroyer.
Starting bet: $5. After 1 loss: $10. After 2: $20. After 3: $40. After 4: $80. After 5: $160. After 6: $320. After 7: $640. After 8: $1,280. After 9: $2,560. After 10: $5,120.
A sequence of 10 consecutive losses requires you to stake 1,024 times your original bet. In crash games, a streak of 10 rounds crashing below your target multiplier is not rare — it is statistically expected to occur periodically. At that point, you either hit the table's maximum bet limit or exhaust your bankroll. The Martingale works only in a world with infinite money and no bet limits. That world does not exist.