Responsible Gaming
We believe gaming should be entertainment, not a source of stress or harm. This page explains practical ways to stay in control when you play the Aviator game, tools you can use to manage risk, and where to find confidential support in Canada. If gambling is affecting your finances, relationships, work, or wellbeing, help is available.
Our Commitment
- Promote clear information about rules, odds, RTP, and volatility.
- Encourage budgeting, time management, and healthy breaks.
- Highlight built-in tools such as deposit limits, session reminders, and self-exclusion.
- Provide up-to-date resources for confidential support across Canada.
Know the Nature of Aviator
Aviator is a fast-paced crash game. Rounds are short, decisions are quick, and outcomes are random and independent (provably fair). Fast tempo can feel exciting—but it also makes it easier to overspend or chase losses if you don’t set boundaries. Treat every round as entertainment, not a source of income.
Golden Rules for Safer Play
- Set a budget first. Decide how much you can comfortably afford to lose this week/month. Never play with rent, bills, or borrowed money.
- Set a time limit. Use alarms or session reminders. Take regular breaks (e.g., 10 minutes every hour).
- Smaller stakes, earlier exits. Target modest multipliers and keep bet sizes consistent.
- Never chase losses. If you hit your loss limit, stop—don’t try to “win it back.”
- Play sober, play clear-headed. Avoid alcohol/substances while gambling.
- Keep it fun. If play stops being enjoyable, take a break or step away for longer.
Practical Tools You Can Use
- Deposit Limits: Daily/weekly/monthly caps on how much you can add to your balance.
- Loss & Wager Limits: Stop play once your preset threshold is hit.
- Time/Reality Checks: On-screen reminders of session length; optional cool-off timers.
- Time-Out (Cool-Off): Lock your account for a short period (e.g., 24 hours to 30 days).
- Self-Exclusion: Block access for an extended period (months or years) across participating casinos.
- Third-Party Blocking Apps: Consider software like Gamban, BetBlocker, or GamBlock to restrict access to gambling sites/apps.
Tip: Many casinos provide these settings in the profile or “Responsible Gaming” section. Set them before you start playing.
Bankroll Guidelines for Crash Games
- Split your monthly entertainment budget into small sessions (e.g., 10–20 sessions).
- Limit each round’s stake to a small fraction of your session budget (e.g., 1–2%).
- Prefer dual-bet setups where one early cash-out stabilizes the session and a smaller, separate bet targets higher multipliers.
- Use auto cash-out for discipline—remove hesitation in the heat of the moment.
Are You Still in Control? Quick Self-Check
Answer honestly. If several items apply, consider pausing and seeking advice:
- I spend more time or money than I planned when I play.
- I chase losses or increase stakes to “make it back.”
- Gambling affects my sleep, mood, work, or relationships.
- I hide or minimize my gambling from others.
- I’ve used credit, loans, or essential funds to gamble.
Helping Someone You Care About
- Start a non-judgmental conversation; focus on concern, not blame.
- Encourage practical steps (limits, time-outs, self-exclusion, blocking tools).
- Offer to help review finances and set a realistic budget together.
- Share professional support options (see below). You don’t have to handle this alone.
Confidential Help & Support (Canada)
If you’re in Canada, each province/territory provides confidential services for gambling concerns. For the most accurate, up-to-date contacts, visit your provincial health or gaming regulator website and search for “problem gambling help” or “gambling support.”
- National/General: Search “Canada problem gambling help” for national directories and chat/phone options.
- Ontario: ConnexOntario (addiction, mental health & gambling) – confidential 24/7. [Insert website/number your team uses]
- British Columbia: BC gambling support services – phone, chat, and counseling. [Insert website/number]
- Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, Atlantic, Territories: See your health authority’s support page. [Insert links]
If you are in immediate danger or thinking about self-harm, contact emergency services right away.
Underage Gaming Prevention
- Gaming is for adults only (19+ in most provinces, 18+ in some). Check your local law.
- Use device-level parental controls and family filters to block gambling content.
- Never share your account or payment details with minors.
Our Editorial & Advertising Standards
- We review casinos with a strong focus on licensing, fairness, and responsible-gaming tools.
- Partner placements never override our commitment to safety and transparency.
- We avoid language that glamorizes unrealistic wins or encourages excessive play.
Feedback & Updates
If you believe any information on this page needs updating (especially local support contacts), please contact us. We regularly review and improve our responsible-gaming content to reflect the latest best practices in Canada.