Our Review

Reviewed by the expert avatar
Reviewed by the expert
About the author
Nick is a seasoned casino expert with over 5 years of experience in the industry. He possesses in-depth knowledge of casino games, cryptocurrencies, and operators. His passion for research keeps him at the forefront of industry trends and developments. In his free time, Nick enjoys indulging in shopping sprees and can often be found binge-watching his favorite TV series

Evoplay is no stranger to the crash game scene, with titles like Goblin Run and Adrenaline Rush XCrash under its belt.

Avia Rush is another space-themed addition to their catalog, bringing a familiar set of features, a polished visual style, and a competitive edge to the increasingly saturated crash space.

Here’s how Avia Rush holds up.

Gameplay Experience & Features

If you’ve played an Evoplay crash game before, you’ll feel immediately at home here. Avia Rush features a red futuristic aircraft zipping through the void of space.

Simple, stylish, and surprisingly soothing over longer sessions. The low-fi ambient soundtrack complements the aesthetic perfectly.

It’s easy on the ears and doesn’t get tiring, which is more than I can say for most crash game audio loops.

The goal, of course, remains classic crash: bet, watch the multiplier rise, and cash out before the airplane explodes.

The game is provably fair and gets extra credit for being transparent in design.

It earns a fairness score of 4/5, you can verify every round’s result, but the inability to set your own client seed keeps it just shy of a perfect mark.

Desktop Gameplay Experience

Avia Rush Desktop Preview - Main

On desktop, Avia Rush runs as smoothly as you’d expect from Evoplay.

The UI is clean, modern, and uncluttered, even with multiple data panels and the chat window live. Animations are slick without being distracting.

One subtle touch that really stands out? The dynamic background changes based on the multiplier. You’ll see:

  • A sunny orange sky for early multipliers (up to around 1.50x)
  • A soft transition into dusk by ~1.80x
  • The stratosphere at around 2x
  • And open space once you hit 3x or more

It’s a small detail—but it elevates the experience.

The red space plane animation actually adds a sense of progression and motion, which makes the rounds feel more immersive than basic multiplier graph designs (looking at you, Stake Crash).

That’s a dream setup for hybrid strategy users who want a base-layer auto-bet and a riskier manual bet on the side.

That said, the lack of +/- arrows to tweak your multiplier is a bit of a nuisance—you have to use a toggle slider instead, which adds unnecessary steps and slows things down during fast-paced sessions.

A small but welcome touch: you can hide the chatroom if it gets distracting, which is more thoughtful than most crash games that force you to live with the clutter.

Leaderboard & Statistics

Avia Rush introduces a bit of a competitive edge via its top 100 leaderboard, which you’ll find along the left side of the screen. It tracks two metrics:

  • Biggest win in USD
  • Biggest multiplier hit

While this isn’t as interactive as BC Originals’ player stats or BetFury’s Crash social betting history, it does provide an incentive for performance and bragging rights.

Your own bet history is available in-session, conveniently placed and updated live. It’s not groundbreaking, but it’s executed well and adds a nice layer of transparency.

Mobile Gambling Experience

Mobile performance is rock solid.

I tested Avia Rush across both iOS and Android and encountered no bugs, slowdowns, or UI breakdowns.

Avia Rush Mobile

It loads quickly, scales beautifully to smaller screens, and maintains full functionality, including dual-betting and chatroom access.

Even the animations hold up without choppiness.

I really appreciated that the interface doesn’t feel overly compressed or crammed, which is a common problem with crash games trying to replicate their desktop layout on mobile.

Touch controls are precise, and the cashout button is sensibly placed—no awkward finger gymnastics needed.

Gameplay Options

Whether you’re chasing steady gains or hunting big multipliers, Avia Rush gives you the flexibility to play your way.

Let’s break down the manual and auto options.

Manual Mode

Avia Rush Manual Mode

Manual gameplay is fluid and responsive. You can bet as little as $0.10, and the max stake is a healthy €750.

It’s far more than what you’ll witness in a similarly-paced game like Aviator.

On top of that, there’s no quick “Repeat” button, you have to manually confirm the same values each round unless you’re running auto.

It’s not a dealbreaker, but it adds a touch of friction where none is needed.

There are a few more annoyances:

  • You can’t manually input any bet amount—only use preset values like $0.10, $0.30, $0.50, $0.70, $1, $2, etc. So betting something like $0.40 or $1.20? Out of the question.
  • No 2x or ½ buttons for quick bet doubling/halving, which is a missed opportunity if you’re running a Martingale or progressive strategy.
  • Cashout multiplier control uses a slider, not +/- arrows, which makes fine-tuning slower than it needs to be.

The core experience works—but it definitely favors casual players over precision-based strategists.

Auto Mode

Avia Rush Desktop

The automation here is functional but basic. You can automate both bet placement and cashouts, and that’s about it.

That sounds flexible on paper, but the actual implementation feels a bit rough.

If the plane crashes and you don’t cash out on time, the game instantly locks in your next bet. You can’t interrupt the flow unless you manually cash out on time and then click “Cancel.” I don’t fancy that.

It’s unintuitive and not ideal if you need to react quickly.

But that’s not all. It also lacks:

  • Auto-stop on profit/loss
  • Win/loss bet size adjustment
  • Scripting or in-depth customization

That said, the ability to use auto on one bet and manual on another at the same time makes up for a lot.

It opens the door for light hybrid crash strategies, like steady 1.5x autos with occasional risky 10x manual snipes.

Compared to Shuffle’s Crash, where you can program win/loss reactions and build logic chains, Avia Rush doesn’t go nearly as deep.

But it’s also not trying to. It’s more about balance than extremes.

Pros & Cons

No crash game is flawless, and Avia Rush is no exception. After 220+ rounds, here’s what stood out to me—for better and worse.

I’m starting with what’s great:

✅ Clean, stylish visuals (great space theme)
✅ Available in many crypto casinos
✅ Dual-betting interface enables hybrid strategies
✅ Chatroom with emojis and toggle-off option
✅ Solid provable fairness system
✅ Runs great on both desktop and mobile

But it’s also not ideal:

❌ Bet size options are fixed—no $0.40, $1.20, etc.
❌ Auto-mode locks in next bet after crash
❌ 10s between rounds

Final Thoughts

Avia Rush isn’t here to reinvent crash games—but it doesn’t need to.

It nails the basics with smooth gameplay, slick visuals, and a hybrid betting setup that’s perfect for casuals and semi-strategists alike.

Yes, there are a few UI quirks that slow things down, especially if you like precision betting. But overall?

It’s a polished and dependable entry in Evoplay’s growing crash catalog.

If you’ve enjoyed titles like Goblin Run or Adrenaline Rush, this one will feel instantly familiar—in a good way.

Reviewed by the expert avatar
Reviewed by the expert
About the author
Nick is a seasoned casino expert with over 5 years of experience in the industry. He possesses in-depth knowledge of casino games, cryptocurrencies, and operators. His passion for research keeps him at the forefront of industry trends and developments. In his free time, Nick enjoys indulging in shopping sprees and can often be found binge-watching his favorite TV series