Game

Crash 1Win

Seed detail page for crash-style gameplay, comparison content and future risk-focused sections.

1Win Crash Gameplay

Quick facts

Provider1Win Games
RTP97%
VolatilityHigh
Riskhigh

CRASH is one of the core crash-format games on 1Win. The concept is simple — a multiplier climbs from 1x upward, and you need to cash out before it crashes. The tension comes from not knowing when the crash will happen. This page explains how a round works, where the real risk sits, and what makes CRASH different from Aviator, Lucky Jet, and JetX.

What Is CRASH

CRASH is a multiplier-based game where a curve rises from 1x and can crash at any point — including immediately after the round starts. Your job is to place a bet before the round begins and withdraw your winnings while the multiplier is still climbing.
The multiplier at the moment you cash out determines your payout. Bet $20 and cash out at 3x — you receive $60. Wait too long and the graph crashes before you withdraw — you lose the entire stake.
Bets range from $0.25 to $300 per round, and the maximum possible payout in a single round is $10,000. You can place one or two simultaneous bets per round, which allows you to run two separate exit strategies at the same time.
The game includes a provably fair system, meaning the crash point for each round is determined by a verifiable algorithm. You can check the fairness of any result using the hash provided after each round.
Crash Game Loading
Crash Game Loading
Crash Game Loading

How a Round Works

Each round of CRASH follows the same structure:
  1. A betting window opens before the round starts. Set your stake in the bet field — from $0.25 up to $300.
  2. Optionally, set an auto-withdrawal target. If you enter a multiplier here, the system will cash out automatically when that value is reached.
  3. The round begins. The multiplier starts at 1x and rises continuously.
  4. At any point while the multiplier is climbing, click Withdraw to collect your winnings. Your payout equals your stake multiplied by the current value.
  5. If the graph crashes before you withdraw, the round ends and your stake is lost.
  6. The next betting window opens and the cycle repeats.
Rounds can last anywhere from a fraction of a second to several minutes depending on where the crash point falls. There is no way to predict when it will happen.
The history panel above the game area shows the crash points from previous rounds. This gives you a sense of recent variance but does not tell you anything about when the next crash will occur — each round is independent.
Crash at 1Win
Crash at 1Win
Crash at 1Win

When You Win and When You Lose

The outcome in CRASH is determined entirely by one decision: did you cash out before the graph crashed, or not.
You win if you click Withdraw — or have an auto-withdrawal set — at any point before the crash. Your winnings scale directly with how long you stayed in. A cash-out at 1.3x returns a small profit on your stake. A cash-out at 8x returns a much larger one.
You lose if the graph crashes before you withdraw. It does not matter whether you were at 1.1x or at 15x when it happened — the entire stake is gone.
The risk is not uniform across the round. The longer you stay in, the higher your potential payout, but also the higher the probability that the crash will occur before you exit. This is not a linear relationship — the game can crash at 1.01x or run past 50x. Both happen.
Example of early exit: a player bets $30 and sets auto-withdrawal at 1.4x. The round crashes at 2.1x. They collect $42 — a $12 profit. The round had more room to run, but the decision to exit early was protected by automation.
Example of late exit attempt: a player bets $50 and decides to hold for 5x. The graph reaches 3.8x and crashes. The entire $50 is lost. The multiplier was climbing steadily, which made it feel safe to hold — but crash points do not follow patterns.
1Win Crash Gameplay
1Win Crash Gameplay
1Win Crash Gameplay

How Auto-Withdrawal Works

Auto-withdrawal is one of the most practical features in CRASH, and using it correctly changes how you interact with the game.
When you enable auto-withdrawal and set a target multiplier, the system withdraws your stake automatically the moment that value is reached — without any manual input from you. This removes the reaction-time problem of trying to click at exactly the right moment, which is especially relevant when rounds move quickly.
To set it up: before the round starts, find the auto-withdrawal option in the betting panel, enter your target multiplier, and confirm. The system handles the rest.
You can combine auto-withdrawal with manual monitoring. Set an auto-withdrawal at 2x as your safety net, but watch the graph — if it reaches 3x and you want to hold longer, you can cancel the auto-withdrawal manually and stay in. This gives you flexibility without losing the protection of automation.
If you are using two simultaneous bets, you can set different auto-withdrawal targets for each. A common approach is to set one bet to exit early at a low multiplier for a near-certain small return, and let the second bet run for a higher multiplier target. The first bet acts as partial protection if the second one crashes.
Auto-bet works similarly — it automatically places a bet of the same size at the start of each new round without manual input. Combined with auto-withdrawal, it allows fully automated play, though this also means the game runs without active decision-making on each round.

How CRASH Differs from Lucky Jet, JetX and Aviator

All four games — CRASH, Lucky Jet, JetX, and Aviator — share the same fundamental mechanic: a multiplier climbs until it crashes, and you need to cash out in time. The differences are in presentation, pacing, and specific features.
Aviator is the most widely recognized crash game globally and the benchmark most players know. It uses an airplane visual with a multiplier that climbs as the plane flies. Aviator is produced by Spribe and is available across many platforms, not just 1Win. CRASH on 1Win is a 1Win Games original, meaning it exists exclusively on the platform. Aviator tends to have a large visible community panel showing other players’ bets and cash-outs in real time, which some players use as a reference point. CRASH has a similar live stats panel but with a different visual emphasis.
Lucky Jet uses a character on a jetpack as its visual metaphor. The pacing is similar to Aviator, but the interface is designed around a slightly different aesthetic and the multiplier curve can feel different in practice. Lucky Jet is also a popular alternative to Aviator on 1Win.
JetX operates on the same concept but places more visual emphasis on speed and the acceleration of the multiplier. Some players find JetX rounds feel faster and more aggressive in their multiplier growth early in the round.
The practical differences for a player choosing between them come down to two things: visual preference and whether you want a 1Win-exclusive experience or a game also available on other platforms. In terms of core mechanics — bet before the round, watch the multiplier, cash out before the crash — all four games work the same way.
Rules of the game Crash at 1Win
Rules of the game Crash at 1Win
Rules of the game Crash at 1Win

Who This Game Is For

CRASH suits players who want to make an active decision every round rather than watch a passive outcome. Every round asks the same question: do you stay or do you leave? That decision, repeated across sessions, is the entire game.
Players who prefer low variance can use auto-withdrawal at conservative multipliers — 1.3x to 1.5x — and play a high volume of rounds where most end in a small profit. This approach accepts frequent small wins and occasional losses when the graph crashes below the target.
Players who prefer high variance can target multipliers of 5x, 10x or higher. Most of those rounds will end in a loss, but the occasional successful hold pays out significantly. This style demands comfort with losing most individual rounds.
The two-bet feature is worth highlighting for players who want to blend both approaches within a single round — one bet exits early, the other runs longer. This is not a strategy that changes the odds, but it does allow two different risk profiles to play out simultaneously.
CRASH is not well suited to players who want a passive experience or prefer not to make time-sensitive decisions. If a round is running manually without auto-withdrawal, the cash-out moment requires active attention. Missing it costs the entire stake for that round.

FAQ

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Internal editorial profile for the new Next.js and Payload foundation.

Updated: 05 Apr 2026