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Reviewed by Jordan Ellis | Published April 2026
Last updated: April 2026
If you've searched for Aviator strategies, you've almost certainly encountered apps, websites, or Telegram groups claiming to predict Aviator crash points. Every single one is a scam. No exceptions.
They show screenshots of perfect predictions, promise guaranteed wins, and charge subscription fees or require you to sign up at specific casinos. This article explains exactly why Aviator prediction is mathematically impossible, how these scams operate, and how to protect yourself.
Aviator uses a provably fair system based on cryptographic hashing. Before each round begins, the server generates a hash that determines the crash point. This hash is created using a server seed and a client seed combined through a SHA-256 algorithm. The resulting crash multiplier is locked in before any player places a bet.
The critical point: the server seed for the current round is not revealed until after the round ends. Without the server seed, the crash point cannot be calculated. This is the same cryptographic principle that secures Bitcoin transactions — if someone could reverse-engineer SHA-256 hashes, they wouldn't be selling Aviator predictions for £20 a month. They'd be breaking the foundations of modern internet security.
No app, no algorithm, no AI model, and no person can predict the outcome of a provably fair crash game. The randomness is genuine and verifiable. This isn't a matter of having a better algorithm — it's a mathematical impossibility.
Predictor scams use several common tactics to appear legitimate.
Random predictions with survivorship bias. The app generates random predictions. When one happens to be correct, they screenshot it and share it widely. When predictions are wrong — which is most of the time — those results are quietly ignored. If you make 100 random predictions, some will be right by pure chance. Only showing the wins creates a false impression of accuracy.
Delayed display manipulation. Some apps show the "prediction" after the round has already started or ended, using a slight delay to display the actual result as if it were predicted in advance. This is technically simple to implement and visually convincing on video.
Affiliate commission harvesting. Many predictor apps require you to sign up at a specific casino through their link. The app creator earns affiliate commission for every player they refer — this is their actual business model. The predictions are irrelevant; the revenue comes from sign-ups.
Subscription fee extraction. Some charge weekly or monthly fees for "premium signals" delivered through Telegram or WhatsApp. The signals are worthless, but the recurring revenue from thousands of subscribers adds up.
Malware distribution. Some downloadable "predictor" apps contain malware, keyloggers, or data harvesters that compromise your device security. This is the most dangerous variant — beyond losing money on fake predictions, you risk having your personal data and financial credentials stolen.
Any Aviator prediction service is a scam, but these specific red flags appear consistently:
Instead of trusting prediction apps, use the provably fair system that Aviator actually provides. After each round, you can verify the result yourself using the server seed, client seed, and nonce published in the game. This proves the result was determined before the round started and wasn't manipulated.
If a casino's version of Aviator doesn't offer provably fair verification, that's a concern about the casino — not a reason to trust a prediction app. Play Aviator at casinos that run the genuine Spribe version with full provably fair functionality.
If you've paid for an Aviator predictor service, stop all payments immediately and cancel any recurring subscriptions. If you shared financial details, monitor your accounts for unauthorised transactions and consider contacting your bank. If you downloaded software, run a full malware scan on your device and change passwords for any accounts you've accessed since installation.
Report the scam to Action Fraud (UK) or your local equivalent. Report the Telegram group or app to the platform's abuse team. Leave honest reviews warning other players if the scam operates through an app store or website.
Aviator has a 3% house edge. No strategy changes this. The best approach is to set a session budget you're comfortable losing, use auto-cashout to remove emotional decision-making, try the dual-bet approach for entertainment value, and treat every session as entertainment rather than an income opportunity.
For a detailed breakdown of Aviator strategies that manage risk without pretending to beat the math, read our full Aviator strategy guide.
No. Aviator uses cryptographic hashing that makes prediction mathematically impossible. Every app claiming to predict results is a scam.
AI cannot predict Aviator results. The crash point is determined by a cryptographic hash that AI models cannot reverse-engineer. "AI-powered" is a marketing term used to make scams sound credible.
Using a predictor app isn't illegal for the player, but the apps themselves may violate fraud, gambling, or consumer protection laws. More importantly, they simply don't work — you're wasting money, not breaking the law.
Use the provably fair verification built into the game. After each round, check the server seed, client seed, and nonce to independently verify the crash point was predetermined.
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