Glossary

Auto-Bet

A feature that automatically places your bet and optionally cashes out at a pre-set multiplier for every round, without requiring manual input between rounds.

Auto-bet is one of the most useful — and potentially most dangerous — features in a crash game. Used with intention, it enforces your strategy mechanically. Used without limits, it can deplete a bankroll faster than manual play because it removes the natural pause between rounds.

What auto-bet typically controls

Most crash game auto-bet systems let you configure:

  • Bet amount — fixed, or adjustable after wins/losses (enabling Martingale-style progressions automatically)
  • Auto cash-out — fixed multiplier target per round
  • Stop conditions — stop after N rounds, stop if balance drops below X, stop if balance exceeds Y
  • Bet adjustment rules — “increase bet by 100% after loss” (Martingale), “decrease bet by 50% after win”

The speed problem

Auto-bet removes the natural pause between rounds — the moment you would consciously re-evaluate whether to continue. On manual play, each new bet requires a deliberate action. With auto-bet, rounds fire continuously at maximum speed.

A session that would take 30 minutes manually might complete in 5 minutes on auto-bet. This compresses variance, makes session limits harder to feel in real time, and accelerates both wins and losses.

Recommended: Set strict stop conditions before activating auto-bet. At minimum: stop if balance drops by 20–25% of session bankroll.

The strategic use

For disciplined players running a fixed-target strategy, auto-bet with auto-cash-out and balance stop conditions is the optimal way to execute that strategy consistently. It eliminates hesitation, psychological override, and manual error.

The tool itself is neutral — it amplifies whatever strategy (good or bad) you configure it with.

  • Cash-Out — what auto-bet fires on your behalf
  • Session — the boundary you must set before activating auto-bet
  • Base Bet — the unit auto-bet operates on