How Aviator Works on dungeon
Aviator on our dungeon platform is a multiplier game where a digital plane takes flight. A multiplier starts at rules and climbs continuously. You decide in advance how much to stake, then watch the multiplier rise. At any moment, you can cash out and collect your stake multiplied by the current multiplier value — but the plane can crash at any time.
If you cash out before the crash, you win. If the plane crashes before you act, your stake for that round is forfeited. The appeal lies in the balance between greed and caution: a higher multiplier means a bigger payout, but the longer you wait, the greater the crash risk. Each round lasts seconds to minutes, and our dungeon servers settle results instantly.
Core Mechanics
Our dungeon Aviator uses a certified algorithm that generates a random crash point for each round. You cannot predict the exact moment, but historical patterns help you recognise typical multiplier ranges. The house edge is built into the algorithm; our platform profits when players crash, not when they win.
Stakes range from modest to substantial, depending on your account balance and verification tier. Payouts are instant upon settlement, and losses are processed equally fast. We recommend tracking your session results in our account dashboard.
Discipline in Aviator means knowing your profit target and stop-loss limit before the first round begins — not chasing a single big multiplier in hopes of recovery.
Payment Flow: Deposit & Withdrawal on dungeon
Getting funds into your dungeon account for Aviator is straightforward. We accept e-wallet transfers via DANA, e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment, and online payment, as well as e-wallet scan-and-pay for instant bank linking. For larger transfers, use virtual-account deposits to mobile banking, local payment, online payment, or e-wallet — funds arrive after verification, typically within a standard processing window.
mobile banking is quickest for smaller deposits
Scan our local payment code via your bank app or e-wallet, confirm the amount, and funds appear in your dungeon account instantly — no manual transfer needed.
Withdrawals reverse the process. You nominate a payment method (the same one used for deposit, or an alternative that matches your verified identity), enter your withdrawal amount, and our settlement team processes it within our standard verification window. Cashout limits depend on your account tier and transaction history.
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Register and verify your identity
Provide phone number, email, and ID document. Our dungeon team confirms within a few hours during business days.
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Choose your deposit method
Link online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment, or a bank account. Test with a small transfer first if new to the platform.
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Fund your account
Transfer your chosen amount via your selected payment method. E-wallets settle instantly; bank transfers within a standard window.
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Start playing Aviator
Log into dungeon, navigate to Aviator, set your stake, and cashout before the crash. Winnings are added instantly to your balance.
Banking Partners on dungeon
We partner with Indonesia's major banks and fintech providers to ensure smooth deposits and withdrawals. Each payment method has its own security layer and verification step, so your funds move safely between your bank or wallet and our dungeon platform.
For holidays like Idul Fitri or Idul Adha, bank processing may slow slightly. We recommend depositing a day or two ahead if you anticipate heavier traffic. online payment and e-wallets typically bypass these delays.
Session Strategy and Risk Management
Aviator rewards discipline over luck. Before you launch a session, decide on a session budget — the total amount you are comfortable risking in that sitting. Divide that budget into stakes for individual rounds. For example, if your session budget is our welcome offer and you plan 10 rounds, each round stake might be our welcome offer. This prevents you from exhausting your account in one or two ill-timed rounds.
Set a profit target too. If you win our welcome offer or 20 percent of your session budget — whichever comes first — consider stopping. Similarly, decide your stop-loss: if you lose 30 percent of your session budget, step away. These limits sound simple on paper but require genuine commitment during play. Our dungeon dashboard logs every round, so you can review your history afterward and spot patterns in your decision-making.
Cashout timing is the core skill in Aviator. Low multipliers (1.5× to 2.5×) crash less often but pay proportionally less. High multipliers (5× or above) crash more frequently but offer bigger payouts. Most players find their comfort zone between 2× and 3.5×. Start by cashing out at a fixed multiplier for your first few sessions; once you feel confident, experiment with variable multipliers — for instance, cashing out at 1.8× on even rounds and 2.8× on odd rounds.
Account Features on dungeon Aviator
Our dungeon platform integrates several tools to support your Aviator play. A transaction history tab shows every deposit, withdrawal, and game outcome, timestamped and linked to your payment method. Use this to audit your decisions: Did I cash out too early? Too late? Did I stick to my session plan?
You can set account notifications to alert you when a deposit clears or a withdrawal is processed. For mobile users on iOS Web or Android, we push notifications to your device so you do not miss important account updates. Semarang, Medan, Yogyakarta, and other Indonesian cities all receive the same feature set — our dungeon app and browser experience are identical across regions.
Account security is enforced through two-factor authentication (OTP via SMS or email) on sensitive actions like withdrawal or payment-method changes. Your password should be strong and unique. If you suspect unauthorised access, our customer-support team responds during business hours via live chat on the dungeon website.
Our Aviator guide draws on community feedback from thousands of verified players across Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, and beyond. These practices reflect observed patterns, not guarantees.
